Public debate in Russia : matters of (dis)order /
An interdisciplinary study of Russian public debate past and present. Can we trace attempts taken in Russian history to overcome the inability to speak publicly? How do different social groups in modern Russia cope with situations when they have to participate in a public discussion and arrive at a...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Edinburgh :
Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press,
[2016]
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Colección: | Russian language and society.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Introduction: Nikolai Vakhtin, Boris Firsov; Chapter 1: The discourse of argumentation in totalitarian language and post-Soviet communication failures, Nikolai Vakhtin; Chapter 2: Russian and Newspeak: between Myth and Reality, Maxim Krongauz; Chapter 3: 'A Society that Speaks Concordantly' or Mechanisms of Communication of Government and Society in Old and New Russia, Dmitrii Kalugin; Chapter 4: Legal Literature 'for the People' and the Use of Language (Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century), Michel Tissier; Chapter 5: 'How to Write to the Newspapers': Language and Power at the Birth of Soviet Public Language, Catriona Kelly; Chapter 6:The Rhetoric of the Social(ist) Meeting in Literature and Cinema, Valerii V'iugin; Chapter 7: Was Official Discourse Hegemonic? Boris Firsov; Chapter 8: Attempts to overcome 'public aphasia': an analysis of public discussions in Russia at the beginning of the twenty-first century, Boris Gladarev; Chapter 9: Allotment Associations in Search of a New Meaning, Alexandra Kasatkina; Chapter 10: 'Distances of Vast Dimensions ... ': Official versus Public Language (material from meetings of the organising committees of mass meetings and events, January-February 2012), Kapitolina Fedorova; Chapter 11: Insides made public: Talking publicly about personal in post-Soviet media culture (the example of the Fashion Verdict programme), Juliia Lerner, Klavdiia Zbenovich; Chapter 12: Distorted Speech and Aphasia in Satirical Counter-discourse: Oleg Kozyrev's Internet Videos 'Rulitiki', Lara Ryazanova-Clarke; Chapter 13: The Past and Future of Russian Public Language, Oleg Kharkhordin; About the Authors.