The temporality of memory politics: An analysis of Russian state media narratives on the war in Ukraine

被引:1
|
作者
Khlevniuk, Daria [1 ]
Noordenbos, Boris [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
来源
BRITISH JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY | 2025年 / 76卷 / 02期
基金
欧洲研究理事会;
关键词
media; memory politics; Russia; temporality; Ukraine; war; CONSTRUCTION;
D O I
10.1111/1468-4446.13171
中图分类号
C91 [社会学];
学科分类号
030301 ; 1204 ;
摘要
This paper seeks to enhance memory studies' conceptual toolkit by reconsidering established perspectives on "memory politics." The paper theorizes various modes of temporal connectivity cultivated through politicized references to a shared past. Our empirical case is focused on a collection of roughly 5.000 recent articles about the war in Ukraine from major Russian state-aligned news outlets. We analyze and typologize the narrative and rhetorical gestures by which these articles make the Soviet "Great Patriotic War" and the post-Soviet "special military operation" speak to one another, both prior to and following the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The analysis demonstrates that even in contemporary Russia's tightly controlled, propagandistic mass media ecology, politicized uses of memory foster diverse temporal structures within the propaganda narratives. We present a typology of these relations, mapping the distinct modes and intensities of connections between past and present. At one end of the spectrum, we identify a mode of temporal organization that presents past events and figures as fully detached from the present, available solely for historiographic reflection. At the other end, we find narratives that entirely collapse historical distance, addressing contemporary audiences as participants in a timeless war drama, with stakes that transcend any specific historical period. We propose that the presented typology may be applicable beyond our specific case. As a tool for analyzing the hitherto understudied organization of time in politicized articulations of memory, it could be employed in various cultural and political contexts. Furthermore, our approach can serve as a foundation for future research into the actual persuasive and affective impact that specific temporal modalities may have on their target audiences.
引用
收藏
页码:390 / 406
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] China's belt and road initiative in Russian media: politics of narratives, images, and metaphors
    Kuteleva, Anna
    Vasiliev, Dmitrii
    EURASIAN GEOGRAPHY AND ECONOMICS, 2021, 62 (5-6) : 582 - 606
  • [42] The impact of the Russian-Ukraine war on the stock market: a causal analysis
    Koseoglu, Sinem Derindere
    Mercangoz, Burcu Adiguzel
    Khan, Khalid
    Sarwar, Suleman
    APPLIED ECONOMICS, 2024, 56 (21) : 2509 - 2519
  • [43] Analysis of the media discourse on the 2022 war in Ukraine: The case of Russia
    Brusylovska, Olga
    Maksymenko, Iryna
    REGIONAL SCIENCE POLICY AND PRACTICE, 2023, 15 (01): : 222 - 235
  • [44] A multidimensional analysis of media framing in the Russia-Ukraine war
    Ibrahim, Majd
    Wang, Bang
    Xu, Minghua
    Xu, Han
    JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL SOCIAL SCIENCE, 2025, 8 (02):
  • [45] Renaming Men: the politics of memory and the commemoration of war at the Baltic-Russian Crossroads
    Novikova, Irina
    WOMENS HISTORY REVIEW, 2011, 20 (04) : 589 - 597
  • [46] New media and strategic narratives: the Dutch referendum on Ukraine - EU Association Agreement in Ukrainian and Russian Internet blogs
    Zhabotynska, Svitlana
    Velivchenko, Valentina
    EUROPEAN SECURITY, 2019, 28 (03) : 360 - 381
  • [47] When the media goes to war: How Russian news media defend the country's image during the conflict with Ukraine
    Nguyen, Nhung
    Peters, Pamela
    Ding, Hechen
    Vu, Hong Tien
    MEDIA WAR AND CONFLICT, 2024, 17 (04): : 482 - 500
  • [48] The published Opinion A Content Analysis of German Media Coverage of the Ukraine War
    Welzer, Harald
    Keller, Leo
    NEUE RUNDSCHAU, 2023, 134 (01): : 40 - 64
  • [49] Cognitive and Emotional Responses to Russian State-Sponsored Media Narratives in International Audiences
    Hoyle, Aiden
    Wagnsson, Charlotte
    van den Berg, Helma
    Doosje, Bertjan
    Kitzen, Martijn
    JOURNAL OF MEDIA PSYCHOLOGY-THEORIES METHODS AND APPLICATIONS, 2023, 35 (06) : 362 - 374
  • [50] Armed to the Tweet: social media and the war in Ukraine: shaping narratives of self-understanding and self-determination
    Penkala, Alina
    Derluyn, Ilse
    Lietaert, Ine
    JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND DEVELOPMENT, 2023, 26 (04) : 791 - 804