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War of Words: The USSR and Cold War Linguistic Competition in Global South

March 25 @ 5:00 pm - 6:30 pm

This talk argues language politics played an important role in the Global Cold War.

This talk argues language politics played an important role in the Global Cold War. In the aftermath of decolonization, Soviet officials viewed themselves as having been drawn into a new field of Cold War competition with their western rivals—not only for the hearts and minds of Asian and African citizens—but also for their tongues. Soviet officials anxiously interpreted British, American, and French efforts to promote English and French language instruction in postcolonial Asia and Africa as a threat to their own, emerging interests in the Global South. In response, they developed their own project to use Russian as a form of soft power on the two continents—a project that derived heavily from the very countries whose influence it was designed to combat. The talk will highlight the USSR’s linguistic politics in the Global South in the context of the country’s broader Cold War project to make Russian into a “world language.”

Event Speakers:

Rachel Applebaum: Associate Professor of History, Tufts University

Margaret Litvin: Associate Professor of Arabic and Comparative Literature, Boston University

Venue

K262, CGIS Knafel
1737 Cambridge Street
Cambridge, MA 02138 United States

Organizer

Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies
View Organizer Website

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