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The Construction of Russia’s Anti-drinking Campaign in the Russian News Media: the Rhetoric of Overcoming Alcohol Abuse and Counter-rhetorical Strategies
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3 ОБЩЕСТВЕННЫЕ НАУКИ
Date of publication
01.07.2019
Public year
2019
ISBN
1811-038X
The Construction of Russia’s Anti-drinking Campaign in the Russian News Media: the Rhetoric of Overcoming Alcohol Abuse and Counter-rhetorical Strategies
Annotation
Through the lens of social constructivism, this article analyzes how the Russian news media portray the state anti-drinking campaign in Russia. In the first analytical stage, I consider the rhetoric of overcoming widespread alcoholism as a narrow aspect of the alcoholization of the population. In the second analytical stage, I focus on the counter-rhetoric strategies against the anti-drinking policies. By applying quantitative (N=37,903) and qualitative (N=10,002) content analysis to news media items published between 2016–2017 (using the Medialogia platform) I construct a typology of the counter-rhetorical strategies. The typology includes the following strategies: 1) ironization, ridiculing the effort of the state in overcoming alcoholism; 2) vulgarization, simplifying and distorting the meaning of the anti-alcohol measures; 3) sovietization, creating associations between current anti-drinking policies and Gorbachev’s anti-alcohol campaign; 4) mythologizing, cultivating fictional ideas about the efficiency of the anti-drinking measures; 5) exaggeration, operating via exaggerated facts and judgments about the policies; 6) desacralization, depreciating their meanings; and 7) pathologization, questioning the adequacy of anti-drinking measures. The news media items and counter-rhetorical strategies are analyzed using the methodology developed by Ibarra and Kitsuse. I conclude that there is a contradiction between the rhetoric of overcoming widespread alcoholism and the alienating image of the state’s highly restrictive anti-drinking policies. The counter-rhetorical strategies which dramatize those policies maintain the perception that alcoholization is an overwhelming problem.
About authors
Yulia Belova
Leading Research Fellow
Institute for Applied Political Studies, HSE University; Laboratory for Studies in Economic Sociology, HSE University
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