Welcome to the
Russian Area Studies Program

In
a globally interdependent world, Russia and the other states formed
after the breakup of the USSR offer immense possibilities for trade
and cooperation. Yet the ignorance about Russia and the successor states
is profound. Winston Churchill's famous statement that the Soviet Union
is a "riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma" should serve as
no excuse for this situation. All the new nations, particularly the
Russian Federation, are open for study as during no other time in history,
offering extraordinary opportunities for investigation.
It is in this spirit that Wittenberg offers the Russian Area Studies
Program to its undergraduates. Through the study of Soviet and post-Soviet
history, art, language, literature, geography, economics, sociology,
and politics, Wittenberg students gain important knowledge about Russia
and the other newly independent nations today. Some students may be
stimulated enough to perform advanced graduate work at other institutions;
others, to seek policy-making positions in the U.S. government or to
engage in business activities in the area. But the fundamental purpose
of the program is to produce intelligent citizens and participants in
the society around them who have a thorough understanding of Russia
and the other new nations, whatever their vocations may be.
The Russian Area Studies Program assumes that knowledge of Russia and
the other successor states demands, first and foremost, an understanding
of those internal cultural, political and historical forces that contribute
to the life of the nations today. For without such knowledge, explaining
current domestic or foreign behavior is a futile exercise in applying
faulty assumptions about what the leaders and people in these nations
"really" believe and why they believe it or in using frameworks that
are rooted in the American, rather than, for instance, in the Russian
experience.
Misperceptions about the societies and political systems in the post-Soviet
area inhibit fruitful political relations and harm normal international
business contacts. George F. Kennan, eminent scholar and diplomat, has
said that part of the problem of American policy toward the USSR derived
from a misunderstanding of the Russian historical experience and its
political manifestations. The Russian Area Studies Program attempts
to impart an accurate, informed view of Russia and the successor states
to present their realities and to increase international understanding.
Check out RAST faculty and students in the news! Click here.