Dispossession
Anthropological Perspectives on Russia's War Against Ukraine
Herausgeber: Wanner, Catherine
Dispossession
Anthropological Perspectives on Russia's War Against Ukraine
Herausgeber: Wanner, Catherine
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This volume examines Russia's war on Ukraine. Scholars who have lived through the Russian invasion or who have conducted ethnographic research in the region for decades provide timely analysis of a war that will leave a lasting mark on the 21st century.
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This volume examines Russia's war on Ukraine. Scholars who have lived through the Russian invasion or who have conducted ethnographic research in the region for decades provide timely analysis of a war that will leave a lasting mark on the 21st century.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 254
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 531g
- ISBN-13: 9781032466248
- ISBN-10: 1032466243
- Artikelnr.: 69434296
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 254
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 531g
- ISBN-13: 9781032466248
- ISBN-10: 1032466243
- Artikelnr.: 69434296
Catherine Wanner is Professor of Anthropology, History, and Religious Studies at The Pennsylvania State University, USA. Using ethnographic and archival methods, her research centers on the politics of religion, conflict mediation, and trauma healing. In 2020, she was awarded the Distinguished Scholar Prize from the Association for the Study of Eastern Christianity. She is the convener of the Working Group on Lived Religion in Eastern Europe and Eurasia. She is the author or editor of six books on Ukraine, most recently Everyday Religiosity and the Politics of Belonging in Ukraine (2022).
Introduction: War and dispossession; Part I: Experiencing loss through
dispossession and displacement; 1.The time that was taken from us: Temporal
experiences after the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine - Natalia
Otrishchenko; 2. The emotional and behavioral consequences of the Russian
invasion of Ukraine for the civilian population of Ukraine - Valentyna
Pavlenko; 3. Population displacement and the Russian occupation of Crimea:
"Never again" becomes "Again and again" - Greta Uehling; 4. No longer a
citizen: Dispossession in Eastern Ukraine - Oleksandra Tarkhanova; 5.
Fragmented lives, fragmented histories in Odesa - Marina Sapritsky-Nahum;
6. Faith and war: Grassroots Ukrainian Protestantism in the context of the
Russian invasion - Tatiana Vagramenko; Part II: Radical openness and
responding to dispossession; 7. Memes as antibodies: Creativity and
resilience in the face of Russia's war - Laada Bilaniuk; 8. "Russian
Warship, Go F*ck Yourself": Circulating social media discourses in the
Russia-Ukraine war - Bridget Goodman; 9. Responses to dispossession:
Self-organization and the state - Emily Channell-Justice; 10. Women and
gender equality in the Ukrainian Armed Forces - Tamara Martsenyuk; 11.
Meeting the Other: Peacekeeping and religious actors in a time of war -
Tetiana Kalenychenko.
dispossession and displacement; 1.The time that was taken from us: Temporal
experiences after the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine - Natalia
Otrishchenko; 2. The emotional and behavioral consequences of the Russian
invasion of Ukraine for the civilian population of Ukraine - Valentyna
Pavlenko; 3. Population displacement and the Russian occupation of Crimea:
"Never again" becomes "Again and again" - Greta Uehling; 4. No longer a
citizen: Dispossession in Eastern Ukraine - Oleksandra Tarkhanova; 5.
Fragmented lives, fragmented histories in Odesa - Marina Sapritsky-Nahum;
6. Faith and war: Grassroots Ukrainian Protestantism in the context of the
Russian invasion - Tatiana Vagramenko; Part II: Radical openness and
responding to dispossession; 7. Memes as antibodies: Creativity and
resilience in the face of Russia's war - Laada Bilaniuk; 8. "Russian
Warship, Go F*ck Yourself": Circulating social media discourses in the
Russia-Ukraine war - Bridget Goodman; 9. Responses to dispossession:
Self-organization and the state - Emily Channell-Justice; 10. Women and
gender equality in the Ukrainian Armed Forces - Tamara Martsenyuk; 11.
Meeting the Other: Peacekeeping and religious actors in a time of war -
Tetiana Kalenychenko.
Introduction: War and dispossession; Part I: Experiencing loss through
dispossession and displacement; 1.The time that was taken from us: Temporal
experiences after the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine - Natalia
Otrishchenko; 2. The emotional and behavioral consequences of the Russian
invasion of Ukraine for the civilian population of Ukraine - Valentyna
Pavlenko; 3. Population displacement and the Russian occupation of Crimea:
"Never again" becomes "Again and again" - Greta Uehling; 4. No longer a
citizen: Dispossession in Eastern Ukraine - Oleksandra Tarkhanova; 5.
Fragmented lives, fragmented histories in Odesa - Marina Sapritsky-Nahum;
6. Faith and war: Grassroots Ukrainian Protestantism in the context of the
Russian invasion - Tatiana Vagramenko; Part II: Radical openness and
responding to dispossession; 7. Memes as antibodies: Creativity and
resilience in the face of Russia's war - Laada Bilaniuk; 8. "Russian
Warship, Go F*ck Yourself": Circulating social media discourses in the
Russia-Ukraine war - Bridget Goodman; 9. Responses to dispossession:
Self-organization and the state - Emily Channell-Justice; 10. Women and
gender equality in the Ukrainian Armed Forces - Tamara Martsenyuk; 11.
Meeting the Other: Peacekeeping and religious actors in a time of war -
Tetiana Kalenychenko.
dispossession and displacement; 1.The time that was taken from us: Temporal
experiences after the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine - Natalia
Otrishchenko; 2. The emotional and behavioral consequences of the Russian
invasion of Ukraine for the civilian population of Ukraine - Valentyna
Pavlenko; 3. Population displacement and the Russian occupation of Crimea:
"Never again" becomes "Again and again" - Greta Uehling; 4. No longer a
citizen: Dispossession in Eastern Ukraine - Oleksandra Tarkhanova; 5.
Fragmented lives, fragmented histories in Odesa - Marina Sapritsky-Nahum;
6. Faith and war: Grassroots Ukrainian Protestantism in the context of the
Russian invasion - Tatiana Vagramenko; Part II: Radical openness and
responding to dispossession; 7. Memes as antibodies: Creativity and
resilience in the face of Russia's war - Laada Bilaniuk; 8. "Russian
Warship, Go F*ck Yourself": Circulating social media discourses in the
Russia-Ukraine war - Bridget Goodman; 9. Responses to dispossession:
Self-organization and the state - Emily Channell-Justice; 10. Women and
gender equality in the Ukrainian Armed Forces - Tamara Martsenyuk; 11.
Meeting the Other: Peacekeeping and religious actors in a time of war -
Tetiana Kalenychenko.