Values and media in US-Russia relations -- Fears of Russia, suppressed and revealed -- American "universal" values and Russia -- Russia fights back -- Russophobia in the age of Donald Trump.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
"Andrei Tsygankov's Dark Double focuses on the driving power of values and media in structuring US-Russia relations. Values in the political realm translate into culturally and historically established beliefs about the appropriate organization of human institutions and foreign policy. Importantly, politicians do not create value systems; they draw from them. Although many observers argue that US-Russia relations are a simple reflection of elites' political and economic preferences in both countries, these preferences tend to arise from pre-existing belief systems that are deeply rooted in the public and which the mass media constantly accentuates. Dark Double is a succinct account of the major periods in American and Russian mutual perceptions since the Cold War's end. In particular, Tsygankov focuses on the most recent period, in which the two nations have shifted toward viewing the other as a near-existential threat. In Tsygankov's telling, Americans' negative views toward Russia draw from a deep wellspring of suspicion toward the latter country, and they are only enhanced by a biased media that regularly exploits such negativity. Political elites draw from this rather than create the framework themselves. For instance, according to public polls, Americans and Russians became disappointed in each other's values before the White House and the Kremlin chose to prioritize the issue in their relations during the 2010s. In the United States, the percentage of those viewing Russia unfavorably went up since the mid-2000s, exceeding 50 percent in 2009, whereas anti-American attitudes in Russia increased since 2003, reaching 50 percent in 2005"--
OTHER EDITION IN ANOTHER MEDIUM
Title
Dark double.
International Standard Book Number
9780190919337
TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Mass media and international relations-- Russia (Federation)
Mass media and international relations-- United States.
Mass media-- Political aspects-- Russia (Federation)
Mass media-- Political aspects-- United States.
Social values-- Political aspects-- United States.
Diplomatic relations.
Mass media and international relations.
Mass media-- Political aspects.
PSYCHOLOGY-- Social Psychology.
Public opinion, American.
Social values-- Political aspects.
GEOGRAPHICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Russia (Federation), Foreign public opinion, American.
Russia (Federation), Foreign relations, United States.
United States, Foreign relations, 21st century.
United States, Foreign relations, Russia (Federation)