Cultural Forms of Protest in Russia

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توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Cultural Forms of Protest in Russia

نام کتاب : Cultural Forms of Protest in Russia
ویرایش : 1
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : اشکال فرهنگی اعتراض در روسیه
سری : Routledge Contemporary Russia and Eastern Europe Series 76
نویسندگان : , , ,
ناشر : Routledge
سال نشر : 2017
تعداد صفحات : 263
ISBN (شابک) : 1138956651 , 9781138956650
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 26 مگابایت



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Cover
Half Title
Series Information
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of contents
Illustrations
Contributors
Acknowledgements
Note on transliteration
Introduction: Genres and genders of protest in Russia’s petrostate
Notes
References
Part I Origins and traditions of protest
1 Fathers, sons, and grandsons: Generational changes and political trajectory of Russia, 1989–2012
From generation to generation: wine, vinegar, and cocktail
The sixtiers: the last true believers
The seventiers: politics without illusions
The post-Soviet generation: a new turn?
Conclusion
Acknowledgement
Note on Transliteration
References
2 Dissidents reloaded?: Anti-Putin activists and the Soviet legacy
‘Old’ and ‘new’ dissenters
Displaying protests
Dissent of the dominant, dissent of the dominated
References
3 Why ‘two Russias’ are less than ‘United Russia’: Cultural distinctions and political similarities ...
The intelligentsia and the state: a tradition of ‘stylistic divergences’
The protest of the ‘successful and well-fed’
‘Sha Pu Na Na’ vs. ‘Bo Ro Di No’
Conclusions
Acknowledgement
Notes
References
4 Are copycats subversive?: Strategy-31, the Russian Runs, the Immortal Regiment, and the transformative potential ...
Bottom-up and top-down movements in Russia
Copycat movements
Case selection and sources
A subversive defence of the Constitution? Strategy-31
Subversive temperance? The Russian Runs
Subversive war commemoration? The Immortal Regiment
Conclusion
Note and acknowledgements
Notes
References
Interviews
5 Political consumerism in Russia after 2011
Introduction
What is political consumerism?
State, political consumerism, and nation-building in Russia
Consumer nationalism and cultural producers in Russia
Good buy, glamour: welcome, patriotic fashion
Lifestyles and consumer citizenship
Political consumerism and popular support
In lieu of a conclusion
Notes
References
6 Even the toys are demanding free elections: Humour and the politics of creative protest in Russia
Introduction
Nano-meetings in the snow
Setting the toy protest into context: the use of humour in Russian protests
What does fun have to do with political protest?
Conclusions
References
Part II Artistic and performative forms of protest
7 Biopolitics, believers, bodily protests: The case of Pussy Riot
Introduction
Turning the optics of biopolitical conservatism
Corporeal protest
Vulnerable orthodoxy
Conclusion
Notes
References
8 Hysteria or enjoyment?: Recent Russian actionism
Snatching Chicken
Pavlenskii’s Law
Conclusion
Author’s note
Notes
References
9 Bleep and ***: Speechless protest
Mat: the language of protest, or language as protest
The silence of protest
Protest on screen, documentary style
Protest on display: fictional images
Conclusion: performing protest
Notes
References
10 On the (im)possibility of a third opinion
The Central Golden Object
Room One: Tõnismäe culture
Room Two: kinetics of power
Room Three: violence
Room Four: action
Notes
References
11 Performing poetry and protest in the age of digital reproduction
Avant-garde post–
Performing the Russian poet: after Prigov
Embodiment and poetic bodies
Poets, activists, and digital media
The limits of digital emancipation
Notes
References
12 When satire does not subvert: Citizen Poet as nostalgia for Soviet dissidence
Putiniana and the pleasure of recognition
Political leadership vs. dissenting cultural leadership
The nostalgic subjectivity of post-Soviet liberalism
Citizen Poet and kul\'tura
Conclusion
Notes
References
Index




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