Zhuravlev, Oleg

From the Event to New Political Subjectivities

Interview: Comparing Euromaidan and ‘Bolotnaya’

Oleg Zhuravlev is a researcher with the Public Sociology Laboratory and is now working on his PhD in the European University Institute in Florence. In his research, Zhuravlev focuses on the evolution of political subjectivity in Russia and Ukraine. For the case of Russia, he investigates how such protest movements such as rallies ‘For fair elections’ to post­protest local activism that emerged from the mass mobilization shape “civic identity”.

In the Ukrainian case he studies the evolution from Euromaidan and anti-­Maidan manifestations to military volunteering and formation of new public consensus. Protest movements, Zhuravlev observes, always claim to represent the wholeness of a nation: In case of the Euromaidan protests, for instance, many people participated who had never been politically active before – a phenomenon that creates publicity and emotionality. However, Zhuravlev´s research group tries to find how in an interdisciplinary approach, how and if this collective emotion of citizenship could have become an obstacle for the movement itself: by pretending a political entity there was a lack of political agenda to actually ensure that the whole nation was included in the idea of protest.

The conversation took place in Berlin during the Winter Academy “Beyond History and Identity: New Perspectives on Aesthetics, Politics, and Society in Eastern Europe”, organised by the Forum Transregionale Studien and the Max Weber Stiftung. The interview was originally published at the Transregional Academies Blog.
 

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