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Russian Propaganda

An exploration of Putin's use of propaganda in Russia, from statues of Stalin to the rewriting of children's history books.

Laurie Taylor talks to Nina Khrushcheva, Professor of International Affairs at The New School in New York City about her research into the propaganda formulas deployed by Vladimir Putin and the Kremlin over the last two decades. As the great granddaughter of Nikita Khrushchev, the Prime Minister of the Soviet Union between 1958 and 1964, she offers personal, as well as political insights, into these developments, drawing on previous periods of oppression in Russian history. She argues that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has intensified 'hard' propaganda, leading to a pervasive presence of military images in every day life and the rehabilitation of Josef Stalin, the former dictator of the Soviet Union, as a symbol of Russian power. She suggests that lessons from past eras, described by such Soviet classics as Alexander Solzhenitsyn's The Gulag Archipelago, can offer small grounds for optimism and hope, as ordinary people absorb alternative narratives. How else to explain the fact that George Orwell's dystopian novel, 1984, has been a bestseller for many years and has seen a surge in popularity since the start of the war in Ukraine?

Producer: Jayne Egerton

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28 minutes

Last on

Sun 29 Jun 2025 06:05

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Guests and further reading

Ìý - Professor of International Affairs at The New School in New York City

Chapter: Vladimir Putin’s Russia: Living in George Orwell (In Media and Propaganda in an Age of Disinformation,Ìý edited ByÌý &²¹³¾±è;Ìý) Routledge

Ìý

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Broadcasts

  • Tue 24 Jun 2025 15:30
  • Sun 29 Jun 2025 06:05

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