The drama of eternal recurrence
How does the state’s appropriation of Victory Day help the Kremlin to justify the war in Ukraine? Sociologist Svetlana Stephenson explains

While for Europe and most of the world, Victory Day is an occasion to mourn the fallen and commemorate people’s heroic deeds, the Russian regime has increasingly distorted this meaning. The state’s appropriation of this day, which began long before the war in Ukraine, has now led to the victory over Hitler being used in effect as one of the regime’s prime sources of legitimacy and an important tool to justify the war in Ukraine.
Sociologist Svetlana Stephenson discusses how even purely bureaucratic practices, such as obligatory weekly patriotic training in schools — the so-called “Important Conversations” — serve the cause of Kremlin propaganda and how a future new Russia will need to handle Victory Day in a way that does not encourage or promote public acceptance of war as a norm.
It is this moral capital that Putin has now completely destroyed. Russia will long be associated with the war of aggression that he unleashed in Europe.
These activities teach the public: we embody goodness — yesterday, today, and tomorrow. The “others” (the “Nazis”, the West) are evil, we have defeated them in the past and we will always defeat them.

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