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Северная Евразия на стыках планетарных геокультур: сопространственность и пограничность
Geo-cultural features and transformations of states and large regions determine the specifics of their geopolitical trajectories. Any large geo-culture can be conceived as a planetary one, with its own planetary cartographies and imaginative patterns. Northern Eurasia can be considered as a field of intersection and interaction of various planetary geo-cultures that shape the prospects for terrestrial development. The planetary influence of a large local civilization is associated with the presence of an original planetary geo-cultural cartography of the imagination, with the possibility of successfully translating these large-scale geo-cultural images outside, into the zones of influence of other large terrestrial civilizations. Co-spatiality in its civilizational and geo-cultural dimension means the presence of multiple purposeful planetary thinking that unfolds large-scale spatial communication patterns. Any co-spatial civilization or geo-culture is totally borderline – its borderline is due to the constant process of geocultural self-adaptation in interaction with other geo-cultures and civilizations. Meta-geoculture explores the genesis, formation, and various transformations of planetary imaginative cartographies focused on achieving their respective geo-cultural, geopolitical and geo-ideological goals. Meta-geocultural studies of Northern Eurasia should be aimed at identifying, first of all, the planetary geo-cultural cartographies of the imagination. Northern Eurasia can be considered as a space of interaction between the Western Euro-African cartography of the imagination, based on the Euro-Indian (or Indo-European) meta-geographic axis, and the East Asian cartography of the imagination, which is closely correlated with the Russian-Chinese meta-geographic axis.