In this volume we focus on the years following Putin's return to the presidency in 2012. This has been a more active period than his first two terms, including the annexation of Crimea and, ultimately, the invasion of Ukraine. Thus, this period may be characterized as the run-up to that war. The core issue discussed in this volume is Putin's redefinition of "democracy" as the foundation of society and government in the Russian Federation. Putin argues for a strong central government in which unity is characterized as the absence of dissent. In so doing, Putin seeks to recast Russian national identity, relying on a vision of Russia as the victim of Western aggression.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
"This fourth and final volume on the post-Soviet rise and demise of democracy in Russia, featuring democracy's displacement during Putin's presidency, provides a rhetorical history of discursive maneuvers to justify authoritarian rule, militarism, and the invasion of Ukraine. Even dictators need to supply the people they rule with a governing rationale. In multiple intersecting analyses, Professors Williams, Young, and Launer draw on a range of methods to identify and critique Putin's redefinition of democracy and its related terms, his reconstruction of Russian history and articulation of a mythic Russia inclusive of Ukraine and Belarus, his emphasis on national unity and uniformity that renders dissent treasonous, and his advancement of a conspiracy theory that features Western-NATO-US collusion with Ukraine's leaders aimed at undermining Russian sovereignty. This is a uniquely rhetorical study based on decades of research that elucidates the significance of Putin's principal themes and explores the texture of his argumentation."
-Robert L. Ivie, Professor Emeritus, Indiana University, Bloomington
"This is an important work by the three most distinguished experts on Soviet/Russian political discourse writing today, certainly in the West. Their broad backgrounds in rhetoric, argumentation, and Russian culture and language uniquely inform their collaboration to understand the mythic grounding and strategic deployment of language that has shaped the current Russian role in the world. Their four volume journey has covered a remarkable four decades in Russian history, during which a glimmer of democracy rose and then receded. The focus of this fourth volume is a deep analysis of the progression of discourse that has marked Putin's move from democracy to autocracy. Today, when the Western alliance is in tatters, the newly emerging BRICS Group increases in coherence, and democracy is challenged by autocracy even in its strongest exemplars, this analysis is a must read for those interested in current world affairs."
-James Klumpp, Professor Emeritus, Department of Communication, University of Maryland
"This volume is a substantial and timely contribution to the ongoing academic and public discussion of the evolution of Putin's domestic and foreign policy leading up to the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Employing the lens of rhetorical and argumentation theory, the authors trace progression of the Kremlin's rhetoric from Putin's manipulation of "the lexicon of democracy" to assert the power vertical and stifle dissent at home to his invocation of the mythical "Russia-of-a-Thousand-Years" to justify foreign aggression. Compellingly argued and accessible written, the book is a must read for all those who are interested in international relations, Russia and Eastern Europe, and the war in Ukraine."
-Ekaterina V. Haskins, Penn State University, author of Remembering the War, Forgetting the Terror: Appeals to Family Memory in Putin's Russia (2024).
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ISBN-13
979-8-89783-036-7 (9798897830367)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
David Cratis Williams is retired Professor of Communication and Rhetorical Studies at Florida Atlantic University. His scholarship focuses on argumentation, rhetorical theory, and criticism; he is a recognized authority on Kenneth Burke. His work on Russian political discourse began during a meeting in Russia in January 1992.
Marilyn J. Young is the Wayne C. Minnick Professor of Communication Emerita at Florida State University. Her research has focused on political argument with an emphasis on the development of political rhetoric and argument in the former Soviet Union, particularly Russia. She remains an active scholar in retirement.
Michael K. Launer is Professor Emeritus of Russian at Florida State University. In 1987 he interpreted for the first group of Soviet scientists visiting the United States following the Chernobyl nuclear accident. A State Department certified technical interpreter, he supported Nuclear Regulatory Commission and Department of Energy assistance programs through 2012.
List of Photos
Acknowledgements
Contributors
Note to Readers
Preface
Introduction to Volume Four
Part One: Introduction and Overview
Expansion and Contraction of Argumentative Space for Dissent in Russia from
Gorbachev to the Present
Russian Democracy, the Russian State, and the Russian Nation: A Longitudinal
Argument Analysis of Culturally Targeted Arguments in Presidential Addresses in the Russian Federation
Rule of Law, Freedom, and Democracy: Domestic and International Building
Blocks of Contemporary Russian Political Ideology
Purity of Essence: Russian Exceptionalism and the Origins of Putin's Obsession
with Ukraine
The Lexicon of Democracy in Putin's Speeches
The Lexicon of Anti-Democracy in Putin's Speeches
Part Two: Case Studies
Motivational Structures and Argument Resonance: The Rhetoric of Political
Renovation and National Identity in Post-Soviet Russia
"Democracy" According to Putin: Explorations in Definitional Argument