Journal of Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society
2022/2 Russian Disinformation and Western Scholarship: Bias and Prejudice in Journalistic, Expert and Academic Analyses of East European and Eurasian Affairs, Journal of Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society 8.2
Julie Fedor/Andreas Umland/Taras Kuzio
€34.00
(inklusive MwSt.)
Verfügbarkeit: Besorgungstitel, Festbezug
Zusatztext
Western academics, experts, and journalists specializing in Eastern Europe and Eurasia have grappled with two fundamental analytical crises in connection with the 1991 disintegration of the USSR and Russias 2014 invasion of Ukraine. Both crises were brought about by similar lack of understanding by scholars, think tank experts, and journalists of Moscows relations with its neighbors. Typically, they were characterized by a downplaying of the historic and current role of Russian great power nationalism. The authors of this issue of JSPPS investigate how the Kremlins recent turbo-charging of Russias information warfare, 24-hour TV, and social media activity has expanded on traditional pro-Russian sentiments among Western academics, experts, and journalists. The contributors analyze the downplaying of Russian nationalism, misinterpretations of the 2014 crisis, sympathetic portrayals of Crimeas occupation, and the use of the term civil war rather than Russian-Ukrainian war for the Donbas conflict in academia as well as the think tank world and media in the UK, Germany, Poland, Japan, USA, and Canada. The list of contributors includes: Olga Bertelsen (Tiffin University, Ohio), Paul DAnieri (University of California at Riverside), Sanshiro Hosaka (University of Tartu), Andrei Znamenski (University of Memphis, Tennessee), and Sergei I. Zhuk (Ball State University, Indiana).
Autorenportrait
Julie Fedor is Senior Lecturer in Modern European History at the University of Melbourne.
Weitere Details
Erschienen: 22.05.2023
Umfang: 268 S.
Sprache: ENG
Einband: KT
ISBN/EAN: 9783838217468
Umbreit-Nr.: 9624678
