ID | 180488 |
Title Proper | Culture Wars in the Post-Soviet Space |
Language | ENG |
Author | Wheatley, Jonathan ; Whitmore, Sarah ; Isaacs, Rico |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | In the last decade the term culture war has become hard to avoid. If it is not yet the buzzword of the first part of the twenty-first century, it soon will be. Culture wars seem to be around us everywhere. Each passing week brings some new mention of an outbreak in a public institution, civic space or political arena in some part of the globe. Culture wars are the phenomenon we cannot seem to shake. Battle lines are drawn, rhetorical tools are sharpened and social media awash with vitriol and moralising, and seemingly unbridgeable social gaps. If the immediate post-Cold War period did usher in an era of universal global liberalism, decades on it is now far in the distance, only visible in the rear-view mirror. Instead, around us lie social and political fault lines featuring competing visions of what should be the appropriate normative basis upon which societies should be constituted. They are debates that focus on belonging, on citizenship, on rights and identities. |
`In' analytical Note | Europe-Asia Studies Vol. 73, No.8; Oct 2021: p.1407-1417 |
Journal Source | Europe-Asia Studies Vol: 73 No 8 |
Key Words | Post-Soviet Space ; Culture Wars |