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The red mirror : Putin's leadership and Russia's insecure identity

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What explains Putin's enduring popularity in Russia?

In The Red Mirror, Gulnaz Sharafutdinova uses social identity theory to explain Putin's leadership.

The main source of Putin's political influence, she finds, lies in how he articulates the shared collective perspective that unites many Russian citizens.

Under his tenure, the Kremlin's media machine has tapped into powerful group emotions of shame and humiliation--derived from the Soviet transition in the 1990s--and has politicized national identity to transform these emotions into pride and patriotism.

Culminating with the annexation of Crimea in 2014, this strategy of national identity politics is still the essence of Putin's leadership in Russia.

But victimhood-based consolidation is also leading the country down the path of political confrontation and economic stagnation.

To enable a cultural, social, and political revival in Russia, Sharafutdinova argues, political elites must instead focus on more constructively conceived ideas about the country's future.

Integrating methods from history, political science, and social psychology, The Red Mirror offers the clearest picture yet of how the nation's majoritarian identity politics are playing out.

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Product Details
Oxford University Press Inc
0197502938 / 9780197502938
Hardback
19/11/2020
United States
English
248 pages
24 cm