Fr. 179.00

Crisis and Change in Post-Cold War Global Politics - Ukraine in a Comparative Perspective

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 6 to 7 weeks

Description

Read more

This volume analyzes crises in International Relations (IR) in an innovative way. Rather than conceptualizing a crisis as something unexpected that has to be managed, the contributors argue that a crisis needs to be analyzed within a wider context of change: when new discourses are formed, communities are (re)built, and new identities emerge. Focusing on Ukraine, the book explore various questions related to crisis and change, including: How are crises culturally and socially constructed? How do issues of agency and structure come into play in Ukraine? Which subjectivities were brought into existence by Ukraine crisis discourses? Chapters explore the participation of women in Euromaidan, identity shifts in the Crimean Tatar community and diaspora politics, discourses related to corruption, anti-Soviet partisan warfare, and the annexation of Crimea, as well as long distance impacts of the crisis.

List of contents

1: Introduction.- 2: Crisis and Change in Global Politics: A Dialogue with Deleuze and Badiou's Event to Understand the Crisis in Ukraine.- 3: The Rationality and Emotion of Russian Historical Memory:  The Case of Crimea.- 4: Collective Trauma, Memories and Victimization Narratives in Modern Strategies of Ethnic Consolidation: The Crimean Tatar Case.- 5: Corruption, Crisis, and Change: Use and Misuse of an Empty Signifier.- 6: Gender-role Scenarios of Women's Participation in Euromaidan Protests in Ukraine.- 7: Memory, War and Mnemonical In/Security: A Comparison of Lithuania and Ukraine.- 8: Framing of Crimean Annexation and Eastern Ukraine Conflict in Newspapers of Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan in 2014.- 9: "Crisis" and Crimean Tatars: Discourses of Self-Determination in Flux.- 10: The Self/Other Space and Spinning the Net of Ontological Insecurities in Ukraine and beyond: (Discursive) Reconstructions of Boundaries in the EU Eastern Partnership Countries vis-à-vis the EU and Russia.

About the author

Erica Resende is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the Superior War College, Brazil, and Affiliate Lecturer at the University of Oklahoma, USA. 
Dovilė Budrytė is Professor of Political Science at Georgia Gwinnett College, USA. 
Didem Buhari-Gulmez is Associate Professor in International Relations at Izmir University of Economics, Turkey.

Summary

This volume analyzes crises in International Relations (IR) in an innovative way. Rather than conceptualizing a crisis as something unexpected that has to be managed, the contributors argue that a crisis needs to be analyzed within a wider context of change: when new discourses are formed, communities are (re)built, and new identities emerge. Focusing on Ukraine, the book explore various questions related to crisis and change, including: How are crises culturally and socially constructed? How do issues of agency and structure come into play in Ukraine? Which subjectivities were brought into existence by Ukraine crisis discourses? Chapters explore the participation of women in Euromaidan, identity shifts in the Crimean Tatar community and diaspora politics, discourses related to corruption, anti-Soviet partisan warfare, and the annexation of Crimea, as well as long distance impacts of the crisis.

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.