The Russian war in Ukraine has been accompanied, fuelled and legitimized by a Russian information war campaign that is unprecedented in its scope and nature. Increasingly lurid in form, sometimes surreal, the Russian state-media propaganda campaign has been surprisingly successful in disguising and distorting the nature of the war and shaping the way it is perceived and understood, both in Russia and beyond. This special issue sets out to launch an interdisciplinary discussion on the Russian information warfare being waged in parallel with the military war in Ukraine. How is the war being packaged and narrated for domestic and international audiences? How are these narratives being received in Russia and in the West? What new trends can be observed in the identification and construction of ‘enemies’? How do we interpret and explain the imperial hysteria and hatred currently on display on Russian TV? What are the appropriate responses? How can we avoid the trap of allowing Kremlin propagandists to shape the terms and language in which the war is viewed? The JOURNAL OF SOVIET AND POST-SOVIET POLITICS AND SOCIETY is a new bi-annual journal about to be launched as a companion journal to the Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society book series (founded 2004 and edited by Andreas Umland, Dr. phil., Ph. D.). Like the book series, the journal will provide an interdisciplinary forum for new original research on the Soviet and post-Soviet world. The journal aims to become known for publishing creative, intelligent and lively writing tackling and illuminating significant issues and capable of engaging wider educated audiences beyond the academy.
Julie Fedor
Julie Fedor is Senior Lecturer in Modern European History at the University of Melbourne.
Samuel Greene
Andrey Makarychev is Guest Professor at the Johan Skytte Institute of Political Science, University of Tartu. His areas of expertise include EU-Russia studies, the EU-Russia common neighborhood, and regionalism in the post-Soviet space. Nina Rozhanovskaya is Coordinator and academic liaison in Russia at the Kennan Institute, Wilson Center. She has published on the topics of nuclear nonproliferation and the US-Russian disarmament dialogue.
Andre Härtel
Timm Beichelt is Professor of European Studies at the European University Viadrina in Frankfurt (Oder), Germany. His work concentrates on European Union political developments, German politics, and the development of political regimes in Central and Eastern Europe. Susann Worschech is a Post-Doc Research Associate at the Chair of European Studies at the European University Viadrina in Frankfurt (Oder), Germany. Her work focuses on civil society, protest movements and democratization processes in Eastern Europe, social network analysis, and transnational interaction.
Andrey Makarychev
Andrey Makarychev is Guest Professor of Government and Politics at the University of Tartu, Estonia
Andriy Portnov
Volodymyr Yermolenko (born in 1980) is a Ukrainian philosopher, writer, and journalist, author of several books of non-fiction and fiction and of many articles and essays for Ukrainian and international media. He holds a doctoral degree in Political Studies (EHESS, Paris) and is lecturer at Kyiv-Mohyla Academy. He works as director of analytics at Internews Ukraine and as editor-in-chief of ukraineworld.org, aiming at explaining Ukrainian developments to an international audience in English.
Andreas Umland
Andreas Umland, M.Phil. (Oxford), Dr.Phil. (FU Berlin), Ph.D. (Cambridge), Research Fellow at the Swedish Institute of International Affairs in Stockholm, Senior Expert at the Ukrainian Institute for the Future in Kyiv, and Associate Professor at the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy.
ORCID: 0000000179164646
Lieferzeit
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Lieferzeit 2-3 Werktage.
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herausgegeben von | Julie Fedor, Samuel Greene, Andre Härtel, Andrey Makarychev |
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Beiträge von | Margarita Akhvlediani, Anne Applebaum, Sabra Ayres, Edwin Bacon, Tatiana Bonch-Osmolovskaya, Renaud de la Brosse, Rory Finnin, Rolf Fredheim, Elizaveta Gaufman, James Marson, Nikolay Mitrokhin, Rasmus Nielson, Sarah Oates, Alexandr Osipian, Simon Ostrovsky, Kevin Platt, Peter Pomerantsev, Oleg Riabov, Tatiana Riabova, Natalia Rulyova, Michael Weiss, Maksym Yakovlyev |
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herausgegeben von | Andriy Portnov, Andreas Umland |
Seitenzahl |
334
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Format |
210,0 mm x 148,0 mm
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Sprache |
Englisch
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Reihe |
Journal of Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society
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Erscheinungsdatum |
01.05.2015
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Typ |
Paperback
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ISBN
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978-3-8382-0726-1
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ISSN
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2364-5334
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Fedor’s book has filled a historiographical gap […] The author gives us the keys necessary for decoding these […] discourses and, beyond that, the worldview of these men, an indispensable method for gaining knowledge of the Soviet past but also, in Putin’s Russia, for understanding the Russian present.
-- Andrei Kozovoi, University of Lille 3, France; Cahiers du monde russe, 52: 4 (2012)