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Slavic Literature and Culture Forum Presents Professor Michael Gorham

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January 30, 2015
1:25PM - 2:45PM
Jennings Hall 160

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Add to Calendar 2015-01-30 13:25:00 2015-01-30 14:45:00 Slavic Literature and Culture Forum Presents Professor Michael Gorham The Slavic Literature and Culture Forum welcomes Professor Michael Gorham to OSU and invites all interested to attend his talk, titled "Scumbags, Boors, and the Battle for Civil(ized) Discourse on the Russian-language Internet"Abstract: Anyone who has been paying close attention to Russian politics over the past two years can attest to the heightened attention devoted to public language and the internet as sources of verbal, cultural, and political contamination. According to one policy watch group, in just the past six months, some 20 different pieces of draft legislation have been introduced to restrict, control, monitor, or otherwise regulate the Russian-language internet (Runet). This talk examines how and why commonly held attitudes toward language help shape the perception of degradation, pollution, anarchy and all-permissiveness, beginning with the phenomenon of “scumbag language” (iazyk padonkov) and extending to Putin’s recently embraced civilizational discourse. This perception, in turn, has made Russian internet culture vulnerable to symbolic associations with all sorts of taboo or otherwise socially unacceptable behavior (ranging from cursing to treason, with slander, blasphemy, extremism, and pedophilia somewhere along that spectrum) and has thus provided rhetorical justification for regulating, reigning in, repatriating, and ultimately censoring Runet-based civil discourse.​ Jennings Hall 160 Department of Slavic and East European Languages and Cultures slavicdept@osu.edu America/New_York public

The Slavic Literature and Culture Forum welcomes Professor Michael Gorham to OSU and invites all interested to attend his talk, titled "Scumbags, Boors, and the Battle for Civil(ized) Discourse on the Russian-language Internet"

Abstract: Anyone who has been paying close attention to Russian politics over the past two years can attest to the heightened attention devoted to public language and the internet as sources of verbal, cultural, and political contamination. According to one policy watch group, in just the past six months, some 20 different pieces of draft legislation have been introduced to restrict, control, monitor, or otherwise regulate the Russian-language internet (Runet). This talk examines how and why commonly held attitudes toward language help shape the perception of degradation, pollution, anarchy and all-permissiveness, beginning with the phenomenon of “scumbag language” (iazyk padonkov) and extending to Putin’s recently embraced civilizational discourse. This perception, in turn, has made Russian internet culture vulnerable to symbolic associations with all sorts of taboo or otherwise socially unacceptable behavior (ranging from cursing to treason, with slander, blasphemy, extremism, and pedophilia somewhere along that spectrum) and has thus provided rhetorical justification for regulating, reigning in, repatriating, and ultimately censoring Runet-based civil discourse.​