How Russia’s Taiga Shaped Power Culture And War
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If you care about Russian history, Soviet culture, environmental history, or how geography shapes war,
Russia looks different when you stop treating nature like background scenery. We sit down with writer and Cornell professor Sophie Pinkham to talk about The Oak and the Larch and the idea that the Russian forest, the taiga, and the swamp belt are not just settings in history, but drivers of it, shaping how people imagine freedom, fear, exile, and power.
We trace how Siberia became both a place of punishment and a frontier promise, and why colonization in Asian Russia created its own mix of tragedy, blending, and myth. Sophie explains what the taiga really is, why the larch is such a potent symbol, and how old growth ecosystems like Białowieża Forest preserve “natural memory” because they escaped modern deforestation. Along the way we talk partisan refuge in World War II, how wetlands and forests still affect military strategy, and why attempts at “rational” forest management from Peter the Great through the Soviet era keep colliding with the sheer scale of the landscape.
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Find out more at https://www.bookclues.com/
W&W Norton https://wwnorton.com/books/9781324036685
More about Sophie Pinkham https://www.sophiepinkham.com/