Skip to content
Inscription: “Darling, you may think whatever you want, but I am returning to my ex.”

Image -

Inscription: “Darling, you may think whatever you want, but I am returning to my ex.”

The conspicuous absence of Ukraine from the “ big picture” of the annexation of Crimea reenacted a sort of post-neo-colonial denigration of Ukraine, whose history, culture, and political subjectivity are being ridiculed and rejected, often against the backdrop of blatantly sexual imagery (Wolff 1994 ).
Vitalii Podvitskii
License:
Creative Commons Attribution, no derivatives
With a Creative Commons license, you keep your copyright but allow people to copy and distribute your work provided they give you credit. You permit others to copy, distribute and transmit only unaltered copies of the work — not derivative works based on it.
By:
Vitalii Podvitskii
File format:
.png
Size:
1298 x 978, 2.09 MB
Download

Topics

Contacts

Related content

  • “Crimea Is Ours!” Russian geopolitics and digital irony

    In a new article published in the Journal of Eurasian Geography and Economics Mikhail Suslov, researcher at Uppsala University, analyzes how the annexation of Crimea in March 2014 has been represented and discussed on Russian-language social networks. The article discusses the paradox of ’digital disempowerment’ but also how no state can control digital irony.