SEENEXT talk: Vladimir Putin’s Aggression and Suicide: The Cultural-Interactionist Perspective
SEENEXT Working Group
October 13, 2023
3:00 PM - 5:30 PM
Location
Institute for the Humanities, 153 Behavioral Sciences Building
Address
1007 W. Harrison St., Chicago, IL 60607
Calendar
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Trying to understand Russia’s war in Ukraine, policymakers and political commentators often reduce its resolution to traditional negotiations, discourse of madness, or to what can be called “Snyder syndrome”, i. e. absolutization, essentialization or immanentization of Putin’s fascist imperialism. Contrary to that, to explain the war's driving forces and prospects, Erofeev employs a sociological perspective on the nature of Putin’s internal rule and external aggression showing his limited terrorist rationality and how his traditionalist mafia culture works through capturing the state and parasitizing on the modern structure of society.
Sergei Erofeev is a research professor at Rutgers University, USA. Before leaving Russia in 2015, Dr. Erofeev worked as a Vice Rector of the Higher School of Economics, Moscow and the Dean of International Programs at the European University at Saint Petersburg. He is a scholar of culture, emigration, and communication, and is currently working on the methodology of research in “tectonic value shifts” and the cultures of mafia state and terrorism.
Date posted
Sep 19, 2023
Date updated
Sep 22, 2023