Search
In-Person Program Calendar
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Category
Browse By Session Type
Browse By Affiliate Organization
Browse by Featured Sessions
Browse Spotlight on Central Asian Studies
Drop-in Help Desk
Search Tips
Sponsors
About ASEEES
Code of Conduct Policy
Personal Schedule
Change Preferences / Time Zone
Sign In
Session Submission Type: Panel
This panel examines various dimensions of memory politics in the Russia-Ukraine war, ranging from from state-driven political manipulation of historical memory to grassroots debates over various interpretations of the past and the emergence of digital memory wars. It explores questions such as: How is history instrumentalized to justify military aggression? What role do ideological factions within Russia play in shaping narratives of the past? How do Ukrainian and Russian publics engage with politicized memories, particularly in digital spaces? By bringing together perspectives on official memory politics on the one hand and public reception and contestation of different narratives of the past on the other, this panel offers a comprehensive analysis of how memory is constructed, negotiated, and challenged in wartime. The panel highlights the significance of memory as an active force in shaping contemporary military conflicts.
Memory As a Deadly Weapon: Mnemonic Colonization of the Occupied Ukraine - Ekaterina V. Klimenko, Woodrow Wilson Center, Kennan Inst
Red Memory, White Memory: Competing Historical Narratives in Russia's Pro-War Community - Alina Parker, U of Massachusetts Amherst
Ukraine-Russia Memory Wars: Understanding Ukrainian and Russian Publics’ Perspectives on the Past Weaponized on Social Media - Anastasiya Mykolayivna Pshenychnykh, Loughborough U (UK)