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Thread: 'Cancel culture' targets Russian history amid war in Ukraine, but to what effect?

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    Default 'Cancel culture' targets Russian history amid war in Ukraine, but to what effect?

    'Cancel culture' targets Russian history amid war in Ukraine, but to what effect?

    https://eu.usatoday.com/story/news/p...ne/7104242001/

    Nations and businesses alike have united to impose strict sanctions against Russia, but some institutions have gone a step further, erasing Russian historical figures from events in reaction to President Vladimir Putin's war and to show support for a sovereign Ukraine.

    The Cardiff Philharmonic Orchestra, a nonprofessional orchestra in Wales, announced in early March it would pull music by Russian composer Pyotr Tchaikovsky from an upcoming program, asserting that performing the Romantic-era music would be "inappropriate at this time."

    The orchestra had programmed Tchaikovsky pieces such as the "1812 Overture," which celebrated Russia's military prowess against the French during the War of 1812, and "Symphony No. 2," which is nicknamed the "Little Russian" – a term often used to disparage Ukraine.

    The nonprofit Space Foundation renamed its annual "Yuri's Night," celebrating Russian cosmonaut and first man in space Yuri Gagarin, as “A Celebration of Space: Discover What’s Next." In Luxembourg, a bust of Gagarin was covered.

    In Italy, the University of Milano-Bicocca said it would cancel a course about the work of Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky, but it backtracked on that decision after backlash.

    Though critics swiftly latched on to the decisions as evidence of “cancel culture,” sparking outrage online, international relations experts said that’s really all the cultural sanctions are good for: outrage. Still, Putin took the bait as an opportunity to further spread propaganda that the West is out to cancel Russia as a whole.

    The orchestra attributed its choice to both the music's context and a symphony member's family ties to the conflict. The mayor of Mondorf-les-Bains in Luxembourg said covering the bust was a compromise for those looking to have it removed, and it protected the statue from potential vandalism.

    The Space Foundation said in a statement it wanted to "ensure the focus of the evening remained on our goals" and told USA TODAY that its decision was in part due to “derogatory and anti-Russia” comments on its social media. The University of Milano-Bicocca said its decision was "to avoid any controversy, especially internally, during a time of strong tensions," according to Newsweek.

    That didn’t stop Putin from spinning a narrative of “cancel culture.” In a videoconference for Russia’s Cultural Workers Day, Russia’s president claimed Friday that the West seeks to destroy Russian culture in a manner akin to Nazis burning books during the Second World War.

    “Today they are trying to cancel an entire 1,000-year-old country, our people. ...Tchaikovsky, Shostakovich and Rachmaninov are excluded from concert posters, Russian writers and their books are banned,” Putin said.

    International relations: Biden wants Russia out of the G-20. What is that?

    Igor Lukes, a professor of history and international relations at Boston University, told USA TODAY that snubbing figures such as Tchaikovsky, Gagarin and Dostoevsky “plays directly into the hands of Vladimir Putin and his war rhetoric.”

    Putin has aimed for years to advance the view that Russia is surrounded by a Russophobic, or anti-Russia, world – whose attacks mainly stem from the West. The U.S. State Department lists Russia's claims of xenophobic Russophobia as one of the nation's top five "persistent disinformation narratives."

    Affronting prominent figures in Russia's history adds fuel to the fire, Lukes said.

    “This creature called ‘the Russians’ doesn't really exist … but they all share one thing, and that is that they are really proud of their culture," Lukes said, listing a number of Russian figures and achievements, such as the first man, woman and dog in space.

    "I think that undoubtedly, this could serve as a confirmation of the Kremlin line that the West has gone berserk in its Russophobia, which, of course, would result in a sense of unity among everyone in Russia that would make it much more difficult to protest against the current wall," he said.

    From Russian President Vladimir Putin to children playing next to tanks, here's a look at life in Russia over the last few decades.
    Ted Gerber, director of University of Wisconsin's Center for Russia, East Europe and Central Asia, told USA TODAY that ostracizing historical figures doesn't really help or hinder the situation in Ukraine either way.

    “To some extent, it’s what we’d call performative in today’s language," he said. "It seems like it's a way that some people can demonstrate to others their support for Ukraine, but I don't think it actually has any tangible consequences.”

    That doesn’t mean the cultural sanctions are all for naught.

    “It probably has a marginal effect, but to the extent that Putin basks in the reflected glory of major Russian cultural stars, whether current or historical, this is one more way to stick it to him," Harvard historian Fredrik Logevall told USA TODAY. "It’s part of the spectrum of sanctions, if a minor part – part of the effort to deny him entry onto any international stage that serves to normalize his government.”

    Military strategy: Pentagon spokesman disputes Russia's military 'withdrawal' from Kyiv

    Similar examples in Israel, US
    It's not the first time that countries or groups have rebuffed prominent figures or cultures in light of current events.

    In Israel, an unofficial ban still exists on live performances of Richard Wagner, a 19th-century German composer whose epic operas were marred by his reputation as an antisemite and his idolization by Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich, the Daily Beast reported.

    In 2003, U.S. Rep. Walter Jones, R-N.C., suggested renaming french fries as "freedom fries" to protest France's opposition to a proposed U.S.-led military action in Iraq, according to The Washington Post.

    Today's repudiations are uniquely modern, falling in line with cultural trends of protest such as cancel culture, Gerber said.

    "It's become part of the modern repertoire of expressing one's disagreement, trying to 'cancel' or trying to silence, as it were, people with whom one disagrees," Gerber said, though the term is "overused" by his measure. "Social media has clearly helped diffuse that model of demonstrating one's dissatisfaction with the situation.”

    The actions are more of a "sideshow," he said.

    “I just don’t see dictators in the future fearing to start a war because 17th-century musicians or 18th-century authors from their culture are going to be shunned or canceled," Gerber said.

    https://eu.usatoday.com/story/news/p...ne/7104242001/

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    Ukraine; future Western puppet state to exploit for viable resources and import western degeneracy for all to enjoy once it outlives its usefulness for its NATO/U.S. overlords when its resources/culture is utterly destroyed. Corporate greed, Western degeneracy and complete destruction of Slavic culture that benefits the Western, Satanic elitists/bureaucrats who hid whilst in the safety of their ivory towers.

    Nevertheless, Western degeneracy, lack of cohesive national identity and the covert proxy wars done by Western powers will be akin to the fall of the Roman Empire figuratively and literally.
    “The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents. We live on a placid island of ignorance in the midst of black seas of infinity, and it was not meant that we should voyage far. The sciences, each straining in its own direction, have hitherto harmed us little; but some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying vistas of reality, and of our frightful position therein, that we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee from the light into the peace and safety of a new dark age.”

    - H.P. Lovecraft

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    Sickening. Confirms everything that has been warned about the effects of increasing Russophobia over the last few decades. Nobody wanted to listen or believe. Now it's gone mainstream in its most extreme forms. This will require a world war to eradicate. Unfortunately.
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