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Journal of Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society - Volume 1, Issue 1: Russian Media and the War in Ukraine (англ.)
Journal of Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society - Volume 1, Issue 1: Russian Media and the War in Ukraine (англ.) - Збірник статей
Журнал
Написано: 2015 року
Твір додано: 20-10-2021, 20:55

Завантажити:

Journal of Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society. - Volume 1 (2015). - Issue 1 (Special Issue: Russian Media and the War in Ukraine). - Herausgegeben von Julie Fedor, Andriy Portnov, Andreas Umland. - Stuttgart: ibidem-Verlag, 2015. - 332 S.

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. This 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 inaugural issue of JSPPS sets out to launch an interdisciplinary discussion on the Russian information warfare being waged in parallel with the military war in Ukraine.
From the General Editor (Julie Fedor)

Introduction: Russian Media and the War in Ukraine (Julie Fedor)

Putin’s Crimea Speech, 18 March 2014: Russia’s Changing Public Political Narrative (Edwin Bacon)

Filtering Foreign Media Content: How Russian News Agencies Repurpose Western News Reporting (Rolf Fredheim)
“Gayromaidan”: Gendered Aspects of the Hegemonic Russian Media Discourse on the Ukrainian Crisis (Tatiana Riabova, Oleg Riabov)

Historical Myths, Enemy Images, and Regional Identity in the Donbass Insurgency (Spring 2014) (Alexandr Osipian)
Memory, Media, and Securitization: Russian Media Framing of the Ukrainian Crisis (Elizaveta Gaufman)

Combating the Russian State Propaganda Machine: Strategies of Information Resistance (Tatiana Bonch-Osmolovskaya)

Infiltration, Instruction, Invasion: Russia’s War in the Donbass (Nikolay Mitrokhin)

Ukraine and the Global Information War (Anne Applebaum, Rory Finnin, Sabra Ayres, James Marson, Simon Ostrovsky, Peter Pomerantsev, Michael Weiss)

Ukraine Crisis — Where From, Where To?
Richard Sakwa, Frontline Ukraine: Crisis in the Borderlands, London: I.B. Tauris, 2014. 220 pp.
Andrew Wilson, Ukraine Crisis: What it Means for the West, New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2014. 248 pp.
(review by Rasmus Nielsen)

Karen Dawisha, Putin’s Kleptocracy: Who Owns Russia? New York: Simon & Schuster, 2014. 445 pp. (review by Anders Åslund)

About the Contributors