Although scholars of the former Soviet empire and post-Soviet republics have long expressed interest in state violence and control, the discourse and practice of violence have rarely been examined from a contemporary vantage point. This panel will explore shifting modes of policing during the Soviet collapse. How did prison and policing imaginaries evolve amid the economic and infrastructural collapse of the Soviet Union (inflation, power outages, shifting institutional structures, black market arms availability) and as the rise of new nationalisms reorganized discourses of race and ethnicity across the former imperial space? And what can these shifts teach us as we grapple with our own moment of heightened police brutality, failing efforts at centralization, and political and economic collapse?
Registration is required for this event. The Zoom invitation will be sent to those who register.
Panelists
Ania Aizman, Assistant Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures and Michigan Society of Fellows, University of Michigan
Eliot Borenstein, Professor of Russian and Slavic Studies, NYU
Yana Skorobogatov, Assistant Professor of History, Williams College
Cristina Vatulescu, Associate Professor of Comparative Literature, NYU