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[Print ephemera from the 2013 Moscow mayoral election]
Format
Book
Language
Russian
Published/Created
[various]
Description
184 items
Availability
Copies in the Library
Location
Call Number
Status
Location Service
Notes
Special Collections - Remote Storage (ReCAP): Special Collections Use Only
JS6084.A1 P745 2013
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Item 1-item 183
Details
Subject(s)
Mayors
—
Russia (Federation)
—
Moscow
—
Elections
[Browse]
Political campaigns
—
Russia (Federation)
—
Moscow
—
History
—
21st century
—
Sources
[Browse]
Elections
—
Russia (Federation)
—
Moscow
—
History
—
21st century
—
Sources
[Browse]
Moscow (Russia)
—
Politics and government
—
21st century
—
Sources
[Browse]
Summary note
The 2013 Moscow mayoral election was in many ways a barometer for a particular moment in the volatile balance between a longstanding authoritarian federal regime and opposition forces in Russia's capital, a barometer for the attitudes and reactions of a new urban middle class bristling under authoritarian rule. It stood as an index of the extent to which that class held and was willing to mobilize political capital, and the extent to which the larger population in Moscow was prepared to mount and support opposition to the regime. In 2013 Alexei Navalny, a Moscow mayoral candidate openly hostile to the Kremlin, managed to run and to become the most serious challenger of the Kremlin-backed incumbent Sergei Sobyanin. There had long been a general perception that high-ranking elected municipal officials, and particularly those in the more populous urban centers, were de facto Kremlin installations who ran in the absence of any serious contest. Alexei Navalny had been a participant of some notoriety in the groundswell of protest and opposition which was set in motion following the State Duma Elections in 2011 and surged after the Presidential Election of 2012, and in 2013 he decided to run as a mayoral candidate in Moscow. He was ultimately not able to unseat the Kremlin-backed incumbent and thwart the Kremlin's larger political objective for the 2013 Moscow mayoral election. He did, however, receive financial backing from representatives of Moscow's new monied professional and entrepreneurial classes and succeeded in waging a vigorous and visible campaign and posing a significant challenge to the incumbent. That a rogue candidate was able to achieve this in Russia's federal administrative capital and most populous city was seen by many as evidence that the Kremlin was no longer able to maintain its monopoly on political power. After declaring his candidacy Navalny was arrested and briefly imprisoned on what many saw as dubious charges, but his release less than 24 hours later was widely registered as a sea-change in Russian politics - a sign that the rogue candidate Navalny had managed to garner enough visibility and popular support to make his imprisonment politically inexpedient for the Kremlin, had succeeded in embarrassing the administration, forcing its hand and posing a formidable challenge to its chosen candidate for the Moscow mayoral seat. This collection contains just over 180 pieces of print ephemera documenting the verbal and graphic languages deployed in the propaganda struggle that accompanied the 2013 Moscow mayoral contest.
Notes
Collection consists of newspapers, brochures, fliers, stickers, calendars, posters, and 1 business card--184 pieces in total.
Other title(s)
[Ephemera collection related to the 2013 Moscow mayoral elections]
[Election material from the Moscow mayoral election, 2013]
OCLC
880876587
Statement on language in description
Princeton University Library aims to describe library materials in a manner that is respectful to the individuals and communities who create, use, and are represented in the collections we manage.
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