Fri31 Mar03:15pm(15 mins)
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Where:
McIntyre Room 208
Presenter:
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Numerous TV documentaries were produced and aired on the Russian state TV channels during 2012-2018. This paper is focusing on the production and societal perceptions of these films. The range of topics covered by these films is vast: about space, new weapons, the relics of saints brought to Russia, criticising the international politics, and praising the Russian President and patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church.
I argue that despite of these films’ diversity of authorship style, and genres, the audience perceives them indiscriminately as a whole. The audience consumes documentaries on the grounds they are demonstrated by the state TV without questioning their validity and plausibility. Watching state TV channels is a part of the daily routine of the majority of the Russian population.
This banality is the essence of mass media in Russia in 2012-2018. Production of the TV documentaries. The efficiency of the state propaganda in the case of the TV documentaries is not in its resourcefulness and professionalism, but in its banality.