Imagining Ukraine: From History and Myths to Maidan Protests
Imagining Ukraine: From History and Myths to Maidan Protests
Author(s): Vjosa Musliu, Olga BurlyukSubject(s): Civil Society, Political history, Government/Political systems, Present Times (2010 - today), Sociology of Politics, Politics and Identity, Peace and Conflict Studies
Published by: SAGE Publications Ltd
Keywords: Ukraine; identity; narratives; Maidan protests; Euromaidan;
Summary/Abstract: This article examines how the Maidan protests of 2013–2014 were a space for the collision of conflicting narratives on what Ukraine is and what it should be, and how past, present, and future were used to imagine contemporary Ukraine. Making use of speech acts by local and international actors and politicians on the Ukraine crisis, historical narratives on Ukraine, Maidan protest slogans, and field work data gathered throughout 2013–2016 in Ukraine, we identify four meta-narratives that enable us to unravel such an imagining: (1) Ukraine as a liminal category between East and West; (2) Ukraine as Russia, Ukraine as non-Russia; (3) Ukraine as Europe, Ukraine as non-Europe; and (4) Ukraine as Ukraine. We trace and contextualize these narratives in four separate sections. Positing all narratives in a discursive battleground and problematizing them as a struggle between stories, the article demonstrates that the imagining of contemporary Ukraine is deeply conditioned by the conflict between all four narratives. Ukraine is simultaneously all and none of them.
Journal: East European Politics and Societies
- Issue Year: 33/2019
- Issue No: 03
- Page Range: 631-655
- Page Count: 25
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF