"Are there no genuine Ukrainians in Ukraine?" En kvalitativ undersökning av historiebruk och narrativ i Putins retorik om Ukraina från 2013 till 2022
(2022) FKVK02 20221Department of Political Science
- Abstract
- This study analyzes Vladimir Putin’s use of history in narratives about Ukraine in outward rhetoric, and how it has changed over time since 2013. This is done through qualitative text-analysis of speeches and other texts published on the Kremlin’s website. The goal is to gain a deeper understanding of one aspect behind the build-up to the current Russo-Ukrainian war, and how historical narratives can be used to legitimize inter-state conflict between two formerly close countries. The study finds two main narratives: one in 2013 where common history and religion binds Ukraine and Russia together inseparably; the other from the annexation of Crimea and onwards about a Ukraine ruled by fascist nationalists who have chosen the West over its... (More)
- This study analyzes Vladimir Putin’s use of history in narratives about Ukraine in outward rhetoric, and how it has changed over time since 2013. This is done through qualitative text-analysis of speeches and other texts published on the Kremlin’s website. The goal is to gain a deeper understanding of one aspect behind the build-up to the current Russo-Ukrainian war, and how historical narratives can be used to legitimize inter-state conflict between two formerly close countries. The study finds two main narratives: one in 2013 where common history and religion binds Ukraine and Russia together inseparably; the other from the annexation of Crimea and onwards about a Ukraine ruled by fascist nationalists who have chosen the West over its own people. These narratives have in common a view of history, culture and religion as primordial ties between Ukrainians and Russians. In 2013 this was mostly an ascertainment. In 2022 it is, together with accusations of Nazism in Ukraine, proclaimed as grounds for a Russian invasion or “special military operation” to “de-nazify” Ukraine. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/9081244
- author
- Nordanskog, Arvid LU
- supervisor
- organization
- course
- FKVK02 20221
- year
- 2022
- type
- M2 - Bachelor Degree
- subject
- keywords
- Russia, Ukraine, state narratives, primordialism, nationalism, use of history, Russo-Ukrainian war
- language
- Swedish
- id
- 9081244
- date added to LUP
- 2022-07-03 09:15:33
- date last changed
- 2022-07-03 09:15:33
@misc{9081244, abstract = {{This study analyzes Vladimir Putin’s use of history in narratives about Ukraine in outward rhetoric, and how it has changed over time since 2013. This is done through qualitative text-analysis of speeches and other texts published on the Kremlin’s website. The goal is to gain a deeper understanding of one aspect behind the build-up to the current Russo-Ukrainian war, and how historical narratives can be used to legitimize inter-state conflict between two formerly close countries. The study finds two main narratives: one in 2013 where common history and religion binds Ukraine and Russia together inseparably; the other from the annexation of Crimea and onwards about a Ukraine ruled by fascist nationalists who have chosen the West over its own people. These narratives have in common a view of history, culture and religion as primordial ties between Ukrainians and Russians. In 2013 this was mostly an ascertainment. In 2022 it is, together with accusations of Nazism in Ukraine, proclaimed as grounds for a Russian invasion or “special military operation” to “de-nazify” Ukraine.}}, author = {{Nordanskog, Arvid}}, language = {{swe}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{"Are there no genuine Ukrainians in Ukraine?" En kvalitativ undersökning av historiebruk och narrativ i Putins retorik om Ukraina från 2013 till 2022}}, year = {{2022}}, }