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On the Digital Front-Line : Far-Right Memory Work in Baltic, Central, and East European Online Spaces

(2023) In Opuscula historica Upsaliensia 62.
Abstract
This anthology explores the memory work performed by Baltic and Central and East European far-right actors in the online space. Situated at the crossroads between memory studies, far-right studies, and media studies, the volume’s seven chapters show how a wide range of far-right actors, from small movements to major parties, have exploited digital communication technologies in order to establish their plays with the past in the mainstream discourses of their respective national contexts. With a focus on the online memory work of the far right in Austria, Belarus, Czechia, Lithuania, Romania, Sweden, and Ukraine, the anthology dissects the nexus between politics, media, and memory to show how digital communication have empowered the memory... (More)
This anthology explores the memory work performed by Baltic and Central and East European far-right actors in the online space. Situated at the crossroads between memory studies, far-right studies, and media studies, the volume’s seven chapters show how a wide range of far-right actors, from small movements to major parties, have exploited digital communication technologies in order to establish their plays with the past in the mainstream discourses of their respective national contexts. With a focus on the online memory work of the far right in Austria, Belarus, Czechia, Lithuania, Romania, Sweden, and Ukraine, the anthology dissects the nexus between politics, media, and memory to show how digital communication have empowered the memory work of marginal but dangerous societal actors. As the different contributions show, the online space has raised the visibility and success of organised intolerant groups and, consequently, it has magni ed the societal impact of their memory work. Thanks to digital media, the memory work of the far right can compete on an equal footing with state-endorsed memory politics. rough manipulation of the historical narrative and thereby the perception and understanding of the past in civil societies, on websites, blogs, and social media, the far right has succeeded in overcoming its marginality and in normalising its messages of intolerance on a continental scale. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
publishing date
type
Book/Report
publication status
published
subject
keywords
far right, memory studies, Baltic and East European studies
in
Opuscula historica Upsaliensia
editor
Kotljarchuk, Andrej and LU orcid
volume
62
pages
197 pages
publisher
Historiska institutionen, Uppsala universitet
ISSN
0284-8783
ISBN
978-91-984509-7-2
language
English
LU publication?
no
additional info
Research product of the project "Memory Politics in Far Right Europe: Celebratign Nazi-collaborators in Belarus, Romania, Denmark and the Flanders", financed by the Foundation for Baltic and East European Studies, Södertörn University (2018-2023).
id
2e483e55-f2d6-479d-a598-7475fe81541e
alternative location
https://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-518854
date added to LUP
2024-02-06 19:41:37
date last changed
2024-02-08 03:23:55
@book{2e483e55-f2d6-479d-a598-7475fe81541e,
  abstract     = {{This anthology explores the memory work performed by Baltic and Central and East European far-right actors in the online space. Situated at the crossroads between memory studies, far-right studies, and media studies, the volume’s seven chapters show how a wide range of far-right actors, from small movements to major parties, have exploited digital communication technologies in order to establish their plays with the past in the mainstream discourses of their respective national contexts. With a focus on the online memory work of the far right in Austria, Belarus, Czechia, Lithuania, Romania, Sweden, and Ukraine, the anthology dissects the nexus between politics, media, and memory to show how digital communication have empowered the memory work of marginal but dangerous societal actors. As the different contributions show, the online space has raised the visibility and success of organised intolerant groups and, consequently, it has magni ed the societal impact of their memory work. Thanks to digital media, the memory work of the far right can compete on an equal footing with state-endorsed memory politics.  rough manipulation of the historical narrative and thereby the perception and understanding of the past in civil societies, on websites, blogs, and social media, the far right has succeeded in overcoming its marginality and in normalising its messages of intolerance on a continental scale.}},
  editor       = {{Kotljarchuk, Andrej and Zavatti, Francesco}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-984509-7-2}},
  issn         = {{0284-8783}},
  keywords     = {{far right; memory studies; Baltic and East European studies}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Historiska institutionen, Uppsala universitet}},
  series       = {{Opuscula historica Upsaliensia}},
  title        = {{On the Digital Front-Line : Far-Right Memory Work in Baltic, Central, and East European Online Spaces}},
  url          = {{https://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-518854}},
  volume       = {{62}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}