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The Gendered Iconography of the Belarus Protest
The Gendered Iconography of the Belarus Protest

Author(s): Elizaveta Gaufman
Subject(s): Gender Studies, Civil Society, Government/Political systems, Social differentiation, Crowd Psychology: Mass phenomena and political interactions, Sociology of Politics
Published by: SAGE Publications Ltd
Keywords: Belarus; iconography; protests; gender; protests against authoritarian leader; hypermasculinity; female-led protests; Post-Soviet cultural space;

Summary/Abstract: Those familiar with Soviet posters might have seen the heart-wrenching ‘‘Red Army soldier, save!’’ artwork from the Great Patriotic War that features a woman holding her child huddled in fear of the bayonet with the Nazi insignia on it. The damsel in distress trope is not unique to the Post-Soviet space: iconography of any political turmoil in the world would offer one. But what happens when the damsel is in distress but she does not need a male to rescue her? Or even more so, when she is actively fighting against the male in power? Does she have to bare her chest as the Liberty on the French barricades or wield a sword like the statue in Volgograd? This is the iconographic challenge that the protests in Belarus were faced with: apart from the confrontation between a large part of the population against an authoritarian leader, the conflict had also clear gendered lines: a leader striving to project hypermasculinity (at least, at the beginning) versus a female-led protest. How does this gender divide translate into the visual iconography of the protest?

  • Issue Year: 29/2021
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 80-89
  • Page Count: 10
  • Language: English