Skip to main content

Memory politics and Russia's war in Ukraine

Panel Discussion
poster
Wednesday, April 20, 2022, 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Russia's heinous invasion of Ukraine has unleashed terrible human suffering and catastrophic destruction. That this is brought about with reference to 'denazification' as a key Russian war objective highlights that this war is also a 'memory war', which Russia has been waging against Ukraine already for a long time. Indeed, this 'memory war', driven by the determination to leverage narratives about the past for present geopolitical ambition, has been waged on several fronts - to shore up domestic regime legitimacy, to destabilize the position of pro-Western political forces in the post-Soviet space, and to maintain, in particular through the narrative of the 'Great Patriotic War', Russia's symbolic capital as Europe's liberator and thus its claim to Great Power status internationally.

In light of the significance of this memory dimension to the Russian military invasion of Ukraine, the virtual roundtable will address not only the relevance of memory politics in leading up to the war, but also the further challenges the war is likely to pose for memory politics in the future. We would like to explore this with regard to the immediate context of Russian-Ukrainian relations, but also with regard to repercussions in other European regions (e.g. Western Balkans), as well as more general implications at the international level. 

 

Participants:

Maria Malksoo, University of Copenhagen

Tatiana Zhurzhenko, Centre for East European and International Studies Berlin

Alexander Etkind, Central European University

Florian Bieber, University of Graz

Tchavdar Marinov, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

Thomas Fetzer, Central European University

Moderator: Ivan Nikolovski, Central European University

 

Join Zoom Meeting

Meeting ID: 951 6327 6417 Passcode: 099558