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E-raamat: Freedom of Expression in Russia's New Mediasphere [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

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In recent years, the Russian government has dramatically expanded its restrictions on the internet, while simultaneously consolidating its grip on traditional media. The internet, however, because of its transnational configuration, continues to evade comprehensive state control and offers ever new opportunities for disseminating and consuming dissenting opinions. Drawing on a wide range of disciplines, including media law, human rights, political science, media and cultural studies, and the study of religion, this book examines the current state of the freedom of speech, freedom of expression, and media freedom in Russia, focusing on digital media and cross-media initiatives that bridge traditional and new media spheres. It assesses how the conditions for free speech are influenced by the dynamic development of Russian media, including the expansion of digital technologies, explores the interaction and transfer of practices, formats, stylistics and aesthetics between independent and state-owned media, and discusses how far traditional media co-opt strategies developed by and associated with independent media to mask their lack of free expression. Overall, the book provides a deep and rich understanding of the changing structures and practices of national and transnational Russian media and how they condition the boundaries of freedom of expression in Russia today.

Preface

Notes on contributors

Introduction: freedom of expression in Russias new mediasphere



MARIËLLE WIJERMARS AND KATJA LEHTISAARI

PART I



Frameworks for freedom of expression in Russias new media

1 The occupation of Runet? The tightening state regulation of the
Russian-language section of the internet



MARKKU LONKILA, LARISA SHPAKOVSKAYA AND PHILIP TORCHINSKY

2 The blacklisting mechanism: new-school regulation of online expression and
its technological challenges



LIUDMILA SIVETC

3 Formation of media policy in Russia: the case of the Iarovaia law



KATJA LEHTISAARI

PART II



Reinventing media formats, platforms and networks

4 The networked architecture of media freedom in contemporary Russia: the
case of urban online magazines



SAARA RATILAINEN

5 Transmedia storytelling as an opportunity for re-inventing Russian federal
television



EKATERINA LAPINA-KRATASYUK

6 Authenticity and affect in historical reenactments of the Russian
Revolution on social media



DMITRY YAGODIN

PART III



New media and fragmented audiences

7 Challenging the information war paradigm: Russophones and Russophobes in
online Eurovision communities



VITALY KAZAKOV AND STEPHEN HUTCHINGS

8 Reconsidering media-centrism: Latvias Russian-speaking audiences in light
of the RussiaUkraine conflict



MRTI KAPRNS AND JNIS JUZEFOVIS

9 Sputnik i Pogrom: Russias oppositional nationalism and alternative right



JUSSI LASSILA

PART IV



Tactics of control and subversion

10 Imprisoned for a like: the criminal prosecution of social media users
under authoritarianism



FREEK VAN DER VET

11 State propaganda and popular culture in the Russian-speaking internet



VERA ZVEREVA

12 Freedom of expression and the Russian Orthodox Church



HANNA STAEHLE

Conclusion



KATJA LEHTISAARI AND MARIËLLE WIJERMARS

Index
Mariëlle Wijermars is a researcher at the Aleksanteri Institute, University of Helsinki, Finland.





Katja Lehtisaari is a university lecturer at Media and Communication Studies, University of Helsinki, Finland.