Russians have been into the "Asiatic" thing, it just depends on when you catch them.
There was a whole ideology built around it in the late nineteenth century. It died at Mukden and Tsushima, shot to pieces by Japanese artillery, but the pull on the imagination was pretty powerful nonetheless, while it was still around. Explorers penetrated into the steppe, and Russians tried to be the first outsiders to meet with the Dalai Lama (a sort of Race to the Pole of its kind), employing ties with Buryat Buddhists. These exploits were popularized in the Petersburg press, and in best-selling books - not an elite affectation. The Asiatic ideology certainly conditioned Russian foreign policy for decades. Russian writers of the times talked about how there was a fundamental disconnect between Russians and the European peoples, courtesy of their 'tutelage' under the Mongols; Russia was tied into the life of the steppe better than any power, arguably even better than the Manjus themselves. There's a lot of truth to that, too, and a lot of useful history has been done viewing Muscovy-Russia as one of many competing Mongol powers, both by nineteenth-century Russian Asiatic enthusiasts and by more modern academic historians like Peter Perdue.
woo subjectivity
There was a whole ideology built around it in the late nineteenth century. It died at Mukden and Tsushima, shot to pieces by Japanese artillery, but the pull on the imagination was pretty powerful nonetheless, while it was still around. Explorers penetrated into the steppe, and Russians tried to be the first outsiders to meet with the Dalai Lama (a sort of Race to the Pole of its kind), employing ties with Buryat Buddhists. These exploits were popularized in the Petersburg press, and in best-selling books - not an elite affectation. The Asiatic ideology certainly conditioned Russian foreign policy for decades. Russian writers of the times talked about how there was a fundamental disconnect between Russians and the European peoples, courtesy of their 'tutelage' under the Mongols; Russia was tied into the life of the steppe better than any power, arguably even better than the Manjus themselves. There's a lot of truth to that, too, and a lot of useful history has been done viewing Muscovy-Russia as one of many competing Mongol powers, both by nineteenth-century Russian Asiatic enthusiasts and by more modern academic historians like Peter Perdue.
woo subjectivity