The 2012 performance of Pussy Riot’s “Punk Prayer” in the Cathedral of Christ the Savior in Moscow, their subsequent release of an extended and edited video, and their ultimate arrest for committing “hooliganism” generated a large amount of interest both within Russia and on an international scale. While Western accounts and analyses were marked by their tendency to frame the political content, Russian responses were framed by references to tradition and history. Significantly, there was disagreement amongst the latter with regard to the activist value of Pussy Riot. I argue that this ambiguity arises from a profound socio-spatial anxiety that was triggered by the Pussy Riot performances but was never examined. At the core of the anxiety li...
One of the most significant acts of protest against the rule of Vladimir Putin was staged by the pun...
Pussy Riot’s recent guest appearance on the third season of US hit show House of Cards demonstrates ...
The paper discusses problems in the translation of Pussy Riot across ideological paradigms, as exemp...
In February 2012, less than two weeks before that year’s presidential elections in Russia, a two-min...
Russian reactions to Pussy Riot’s performance in Moscow’s Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in 2012 in...
The article addresses the performances of the Russian feminist-punk band Pussy Riot as a paradigm of...
This article critically discusses solidarity actions in support of Pussy Riot within the global Nort...
The winter of 2011 and spring of 2012 in Russia bore witness to a series of anti-regime protest acti...
The Russian feminist punk-art group Pussy Riot sparked a remarkable series of responses with their p...
This article considers Pussy Riot Punk Prayer, a controversial performance by a feminist punk-rock c...
On February 21, 2012 a group of young women in the Russian punk band called Pussy Riot (PR), with ...
This article analyses the configurations of belief, critique, and religious freedom in Russia since ...
In February 2012, three members of the feminist punk group Pussy Riot, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, Maria...
In the face of a suppressive government and the Russian Orthodox Church, the band Pussy Riot has man...
This article analyzes materials generated by and related to the Pussy Riot Trial, which was conducte...
One of the most significant acts of protest against the rule of Vladimir Putin was staged by the pun...
Pussy Riot’s recent guest appearance on the third season of US hit show House of Cards demonstrates ...
The paper discusses problems in the translation of Pussy Riot across ideological paradigms, as exemp...
In February 2012, less than two weeks before that year’s presidential elections in Russia, a two-min...
Russian reactions to Pussy Riot’s performance in Moscow’s Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in 2012 in...
The article addresses the performances of the Russian feminist-punk band Pussy Riot as a paradigm of...
This article critically discusses solidarity actions in support of Pussy Riot within the global Nort...
The winter of 2011 and spring of 2012 in Russia bore witness to a series of anti-regime protest acti...
The Russian feminist punk-art group Pussy Riot sparked a remarkable series of responses with their p...
This article considers Pussy Riot Punk Prayer, a controversial performance by a feminist punk-rock c...
On February 21, 2012 a group of young women in the Russian punk band called Pussy Riot (PR), with ...
This article analyses the configurations of belief, critique, and religious freedom in Russia since ...
In February 2012, three members of the feminist punk group Pussy Riot, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, Maria...
In the face of a suppressive government and the Russian Orthodox Church, the band Pussy Riot has man...
This article analyzes materials generated by and related to the Pussy Riot Trial, which was conducte...
One of the most significant acts of protest against the rule of Vladimir Putin was staged by the pun...
Pussy Riot’s recent guest appearance on the third season of US hit show House of Cards demonstrates ...
The paper discusses problems in the translation of Pussy Riot across ideological paradigms, as exemp...