Ginger Cats and Cute Puppies: Animals, Affect and Militarisation in the Crisis in Ukraine1

Jennifer G. Mathers
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Abstract

Exposure to affective depictions of soldiers with domesticated animals such as cats and dogs encourages civilian audiences to view soldiers, militaries and even the aims of war with sympathy and approval. This chapter argues that Russia and Ukraine are currently engaged in parallel processes of creating and disseminating such depictions in order to rehabilitate the reputations of their armed forces and garner support for their military operations in eastern Ukraine. This positioning of soldiers’ bodies and animals’ bodies together, most notably in photographs circulated on social media, but also in other representations such as statues, is just one example of the wider phenomenon of digital militarism. State militaries and alliances have become very sophisticated and systematic about the use of digital technologies, especially social media and the internet, to disseminate positive messages and images about soldiers, the armed forces and war. The chapter concludes that the differing degrees of success by Russia and Ukraine can be attributed to factors that are highly dependent on context, demonstrating that militarisation is above all a set of social processes.
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姜黄色的猫和可爱的小狗:乌克兰危机中的动物、情感和军事化
对士兵与猫狗等驯养动物的情感描写会鼓励平民观众以同情和赞同的态度看待士兵、军队,甚至战争的目的。本章认为,俄罗斯和乌克兰目前正在平行进行创作和传播这种描述的过程,以恢复其武装部队的声誉,并为其在乌克兰东部的军事行动争取支持。将士兵的尸体和动物的尸体放在一起,尤其是在社交媒体上流传的照片中,但也有其他表现形式,如雕像,这只是数字军国主义更广泛现象的一个例子。国家军队和联盟在使用数字技术,特别是社交媒体和互联网传播关于士兵、武装部队和战争的正面信息和形象方面已经变得非常复杂和系统。这一章的结论是,俄罗斯和乌克兰不同程度的成功可以归因于高度依赖于背景的因素,这表明军事化首先是一系列社会进程。
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