ABSTRACT

Russia, one of the most ethno-culturally diverse countries in the world, provides a rich case study on how globalisation and associated international trends are disrupting, and causing the radical rethinking of approaches to, inter-ethnic cohesion. The book highlights the importance of television broadcasting in shaping national discourse and the place of ethno-cultural diversity within it. It argues that television’s role here has been reinforced, rather than diminished, by the rise of new media technologies. Through an analysis of a wide range of news and other television programmes, the book shows how the covert meanings of discourse on a particular issue can diverge from the overt significance attributed to it, just as the impact of that discourse may not conform with the original aims of the broadcasters. The book discusses the tension between the imperative to maintain security through centralised government and overall national cohesion that Russia shares with other European states, and the need to remain sensitive to, and to accommodate, the needs and perspectives of ethnic minorities and labour migrants. It compares the increasingly isolationist popular ethnonationalism in Russia, which harks back to "old-fashioned" values, with the similar rise of the Tea Party in the United States and the UK Independence Party in Britain. Throughout, this extremely rich, well-argued book complicates and challenges received wisdom on Russia’s recent descent into authoritarianism. It points to a regime struggling to negotiate the dilemmas it faces, given its Soviet legacy of ethnic particularism, weak civil society, large native Muslim population and overbearing, yet far from entirely effective, state control of the media.

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

A clash of two Russias, a tale of two cities
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chapter 1|16 pages

Television and nationhood

The broader context
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part I|80 pages

Managing difference

chapter 2|32 pages

Mapping an uncertain terrain

An overview of the corpus
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chapter 4|22 pages

Ethnic conflict and television news coverage of the December 2010 Moscow riots

Managing the unexpected
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part II|54 pages

Difference at the margins

chapter 5|27 pages

Re-working Russian diversity

The ‘marginal’ role oftelevision fiction
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chapter 6|25 pages

Transcending marginality

Ethnicity, identity and religion on Vesti-Buriatiia
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part III|92 pages

Difference in question

chapter 7|19 pages

(Un)covering alterity

Television, the 2012 presidential elections and the ethnic underside of Russian political discourse
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chapter 8|27 pages

An unholy scandal

Profanity, abjection and the production of Russian-ness in the ‘punk prayer’ affair
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chapter 9|26 pages

‘There is war on our streets...’

The ‘national question’ and migration on state-aligned television after the 2012 presidential elections
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chapter |18 pages

Conclusion

Difference in the balance
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