Russia’s accelerating authoritarian turn has not ignored the internet, and in recent years, the Russian state has clamped down on internet activities that diverge from the statist line, employing a variety of strategies to dominate online spaces. Nevertheless, oppositional voices flourish on the Russian internet, taking shape in independent blogs and videos. This paper explores three political bloggers through surveillant and resistance assemblages, making sense of this contestation through an interpretation of the Deleuzian virtual that underscores the emancipatory potential of online activities for producing more egalitarian configurations, but also taking stock of the ways that these technologies have increased domination. Encompassing t...
Tiedotusopin pro gradu -tutkielma: Tampereen yliopisto, yhteiskuntatieteellinen tiedekunta, tiedotus...
When considering the rhetoric about the political potential of Web 2.0, it would appear that Russia ...
In response to the growing censorship of their national Internet, Russian users, content producers a...
Russia’s accelerating authoritarian turn has not ignored the internet, and in recent years, the Russ...
In the years that have passed since the social media powered protest movement of 2011-2012, the Russ...
This paper analyses Russian blogs to discover networks of discussion around politics and public...
The goal of this study is to examine the special features of Russian blogging and to continue the ac...
This paper examines how Russian opposition activists negotiate online visibility—their own and that ...
This article analyses digital activism comparatively in relation to three Post-Soviet regions: Russi...
This article explores aspects, transformations, and dynamics of the ideological control of the inter...
This book provides an in-depth investigation of Russian online anti-establishment resistances in 201...
This paper summarizes the major findings of a three-year research project to investigate the Interne...
This article explores aspects, transformations, and dynamics of the ideological control of the inter...
This article analyses digital activism comparatively in relation to three Post-Soviet regions: Russi...
The 2011–2012 Russian protest mobilisations were largely enabled by the rise of social networks. Soc...
Tiedotusopin pro gradu -tutkielma: Tampereen yliopisto, yhteiskuntatieteellinen tiedekunta, tiedotus...
When considering the rhetoric about the political potential of Web 2.0, it would appear that Russia ...
In response to the growing censorship of their national Internet, Russian users, content producers a...
Russia’s accelerating authoritarian turn has not ignored the internet, and in recent years, the Russ...
In the years that have passed since the social media powered protest movement of 2011-2012, the Russ...
This paper analyses Russian blogs to discover networks of discussion around politics and public...
The goal of this study is to examine the special features of Russian blogging and to continue the ac...
This paper examines how Russian opposition activists negotiate online visibility—their own and that ...
This article analyses digital activism comparatively in relation to three Post-Soviet regions: Russi...
This article explores aspects, transformations, and dynamics of the ideological control of the inter...
This book provides an in-depth investigation of Russian online anti-establishment resistances in 201...
This paper summarizes the major findings of a three-year research project to investigate the Interne...
This article explores aspects, transformations, and dynamics of the ideological control of the inter...
This article analyses digital activism comparatively in relation to three Post-Soviet regions: Russi...
The 2011–2012 Russian protest mobilisations were largely enabled by the rise of social networks. Soc...
Tiedotusopin pro gradu -tutkielma: Tampereen yliopisto, yhteiskuntatieteellinen tiedekunta, tiedotus...
When considering the rhetoric about the political potential of Web 2.0, it would appear that Russia ...
In response to the growing censorship of their national Internet, Russian users, content producers a...