Truth with a Z: disinformation, war in Ukraine, and Russia’s contradictory discourse of imperial identity

IF 2.5 2区 社会学 Q1 AREA STUDIES
Vera Tolz, S. Hutchings
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT This article offers a qualitative analysis of how, by adopting identity-related discourses whose meanings resonate within a given culture, Russian state propaganda strives to bolster “the truth status” of its Ukraine war claims. These discourses, we argue, have long historical lineages and thus are expected to be familiar to audiences. We identify three such discourses common in many contexts but with specific resonances in Russia, those of colonialism/decolonization, imperialism, and the imaginary West. The article demonstrates that these same discourses also inform war-related coverage in Russophone oppositional media. Russian state-affiliated and oppositional actors further share “floating signifiers,” particularly “the Russian people,” “historical Russia,” “the Russian world,” “Ukraine,” “fascism/Nazism,” and “genocide,” while according them radically different meanings. Overall, our findings highlight the importance of studying how state propaganda works at the level of discourses, and the acutely dialogical processes by which disinformation and counter-disinformation efforts are produced and consumed.
带Z的真相:虚假信息、乌克兰战争和俄罗斯关于帝国身份的矛盾话语
摘要本文对俄罗斯国家宣传如何通过采用意义在特定文化中产生共鸣的身份相关话语,努力支持其乌克兰战争主张的“真相地位”进行了定性分析。我们认为,这些话语有着悠久的历史渊源,因此被期望为观众所熟悉。我们确定了三种在许多情况下很常见但在俄罗斯有特定共鸣的话语,即殖民主义/非殖民化、帝国主义和想象中的西方。这篇文章表明,同样的话语也为俄语反对派媒体的战争相关报道提供了信息。俄罗斯国家附属和反对派行动者进一步共享“漂浮的能指”,特别是“俄罗斯人民”、“历史俄罗斯”、“俄罗斯世界”、“乌克兰”、“法西斯主义/纳粹主义”和“种族灭绝”,但它们的含义截然不同。总的来说,我们的研究结果强调了研究国家宣传如何在话语层面发挥作用的重要性,以及虚假信息和反虚假信息努力产生和消耗的激烈对话过程。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
13.60%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: Quarterly publication featuring the work of prominent Western scholars on the republics of the former Soviet Union providing exclusive, up-to-the-minute analyses of the state of the economy and society, progress toward economic reform, and linkages between political and social changes and economic developments. Published since 1985.
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