Performing Political Opposition in Russia

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A01=Laura Lyytikainen
Activist Identity
Author_Laura Lyytikainen
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Category=JPA
Category=JPWG
Civil Society
Collective Identity Work
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Flash Mob
Foreground Scripts
Foreign Agent Law
Foreign Currency Mortgages
Levada Tsentr
LGBTI
National Bolsheviks
NGO Law
Non-violent Resistance
Pa Rti
post-socialist identity
pro-Kremlin Groups
Protest Events
protest performance theory
qualitative fieldwork Russia
Russian civil society
Russian Political Culture
Russian Youth
Sochi Olympic Games
social movement analysis
Sovereign Democracy
Unified Civil Society
United Russia Party
Vladimir Putin
Young Men
youth activism studies
youth opposition activism research

Product details

  • ISBN 9781472446350
  • Weight: 530g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Jun 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Drawing on fieldwork conducted in Moscow and St. Petersburg among the political opposition’s youth group Oborona (Defence), this ground-breaking work brings forward a multifaceted and colourful image of the life of political opposition activists in a restricted political environment. Existing studies on youth political activism in Russia have mainly dealt with the pro-Kremlin youth movements, such as Nashi, while youth opposition activism has been studied very little. Lyytikäinen contributes to this gap by showing how youth are also actively organizing against the current government and how Russian oppositional youth activist practices are diverse and constantly evolving.

Theoretically this book contributes to discussions on activist identities, as well as to an understanding of social movements and protest by analysing political protests as social performances. The research illustrates how Soviet continuities and liberal ideas are entangled in Russian political activism to create new post-socialist political identities and practices. It also questions the idea of Russian democratization being tied to its totalitarian past, and that of western-type liberal democracy being the goal of this process. Instead, the book proposes that Russian political culture should be analysed on its own, and as an entanglement of various interacting systems of thought.

Laura Lyytikäinen is Post-doctoral Researcher in the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Turku, Finland.

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