“Moskal’s”、“Separs”和“Vatniks”:顿巴斯战争的乌克兰讽刺歌曲中敌人的许多面孔

Q2 Arts and Humanities EastWest Journal of Ukrainian Studies Pub Date : 2022-03-30 DOI:10.21226/ewjus590
I. Shuvalova
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章探讨了敌人的表现在乌克兰讽刺歌曲有关俄罗斯-乌克兰战争在顿巴斯。我主要关注Orest Liutyi (Antin Mukhars'kyi的舞台角色)和半匿名的Mirko Sablich (Mirko Sablic)集体的作品。使用多模态话语分析的方法,我研究了反对乌克兰军队的敌人如何在歌词和随附的音乐视频中被描绘出来。考虑到冲突的复杂性和交战各方背景的不一致性,我对歌曲中谁以及为什么被认定为敌人特别感兴趣。敌人以几种伪装出现:“moskal’s”——来自乌克兰境外的俄罗斯或亲俄侵略者;“分裂分子”——乌克兰的合作者,通常通过军事手段支持顿巴斯从乌克兰分离出去;以及“vatnik”——生活在乌克兰的被动反乌克兰个人,他们的不作为被认为对乌克兰的战时努力有害。虽然这些歌曲呼吁乌克兰人在武装战斗中击退外部敌人(“moskal’s”),但对于如何对付内部敌人(“separs”和“vatniks”),甚至在某些情况下,没有提出明确的策略。结果,柳一和萨布里克虽然将自己定位为“反宣传”项目,但却冒着被贴上“敌人”标签的风险,从而疏远了最容易受到宣传影响的受众,而这些受众本来可以从他们揭穿神话的努力中获益最多。
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“Moskal's,” “Separs,” and “Vatniks”: The Many Faces of the Enemy in the Ukrainian Satirical Songs of the War in the Donbas
This article examines representations of the enemy in the Ukrainian satirical songs pertaining to the Russo-Ukrainian war in the Donbas. I focus primarily on the output of Orest Liutyi (the stage persona of Antin Mukhars'kyi) and the semi-anonymous Mirko Sablich (Mirko Sablic) collective. Using the method of multimodal discourse analysis, I examine how the enemy opposing the Ukrainian Army is portrayed in the song lyrics and the accompanying music videos. Considering the complex nature of the conflict and the lack of uniformity in the backgrounds of the warring parties, I am particularly interested in who and why is identified as the enemy in the songs. The enemy appears in several guises: “moskal's”—Russian or pro-Russian aggressors from outside Ukraine; “separs”—Ukrainian collaborators who support, often through military efforts, the separation of the Donbas from Ukraine; and “vatniks”—passive anti-Ukrainian individuals who live in Ukraine and whose inaction is perceived to be harmful to Ukraine’s wartime efforts. Whereas these songs call upon Ukrainians to repel the external enemy (“moskal's”) in armed combat, no clear strategy is suggested for how the internal enemies (“separs” and “vatniks”) should be dealt with or, in some cases, even identified. As a result, Liutyi and Sablic, while positioning themselves as “counterpropaganda” projects, risk labelling as “the enemy,” and thus alienating, the audiences most susceptible to propaganda, who could otherwise benefit most from their myth-debunking efforts.
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来源期刊
EastWest Journal of Ukrainian Studies
EastWest Journal of Ukrainian Studies Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
38
审稿时长
24 weeks
期刊最新文献
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