
New Books in History Jeremy Black, "The Short History of Russia: Returning to Another Country" (Amberley, 2026)
Feb 21, 2026
Jeremy Black, historian and Professor Emeritus at the University of Exeter, offers a brisk national history of Russia. He explores origins from Orthodoxy and the Mongol legacy to serfdom and imperial expansion. He traces key wars, revolutions, Stalinism, Soviet collapse, and the rise of Putin. Short, panoramic, and focused on how past patterns shape present geopolitics.
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National History Matters
- Jeremy Black wrote the book to explore Russia within his series of national histories and to interest readers as well as himself.
- He believes national histories offer essential perspectives often missing from identity-focused scholarship.
Rejecting Geopolitical Determinism
- Black rejects geographical determinism and simplistic geopolitical explanations for Russia's actions.
- He argues those accounts downplay variation across periods and internal disagreements.
Orthodoxy Shapes Russian Identity
- Orthodox Christianity played a central and continuing role in Russian identity and politics.
- Ignoring religion risks endorsing Soviet-era state atheism and missing vital social dynamics.



