"Well-known and sincerely loved": Banal nationalism, republican pride, and symbolic ethnicity in late Soviet Ukraine

This article argues that the late Soviet period saw a new form of Ukrainian nationhood emerge, one based less on ethno-historical commonalities than on territorial and institutional cohesion. Combining Michael Billig’s notion of “banal nationalism” with Alexei Yurchak’s analysis of “hypernormalized...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Baumann, Fabian (Author)
Format: Article (Journal)
Language:English
Published: Spring 2025
In: Slavic review
Year: 2025, Volume: 84, Issue: 1, Pages: 115-137
ISSN:2325-7784
DOI:10.1017/slr.2025.10153
Online Access:Resolving-System, Volltext, kostenfrei, Volltext: https://doi.org/10.1017/slr.2025.10153
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Author Notes:Fabian Baumann
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Summary:This article argues that the late Soviet period saw a new form of Ukrainian nationhood emerge, one based less on ethno-historical commonalities than on territorial and institutional cohesion. Combining Michael Billig’s notion of “banal nationalism” with Alexei Yurchak’s analysis of “hypernormalized authoritative discourse,” it shows that Soviet Ukrainian leaders reproduced the assumption of Ukrainian nationhood even as they deprived it of concrete political and cultural content. While First Secretary Petro Shelest still promoted ethno-historical topoi alongside pride in Ukraine’s republican quasi-statehood, his successor Volodymyr Shcherbytsʹkyi preferred an image of Ukraine as a productive economic space free of ethnic specificity. Late Soviet Ukrainian banal nationalism left traces in everyday life, whether in sports reporting, school curricula, or in a specific visual language combining institutional emblems with politically empty ethnic symbols. During perestroika, late Soviet banal nationalism was appropriated and instrumentalized first by the national-democratic opposition, and later by “national communists.”
Item Description:Enthält Literaturangaben
Physical Description:Online Resource
ISSN:2325-7784
DOI:10.1017/slr.2025.10153
Access:Open Access