Call for Papers : 'A Window of opportunities : ' Newspaper press during perestroika - analyses and field reports
Workshop – Helsinki, Max Weber Forum, Finland, 26 – 27 February 2026
Organizers : Franziska Schedewie (Heidelberg) and Bradley Woodworth (New Haven) with the Max Weber Forum Helsinki
In the late 1980s, freedom of the press was upheld by reform policy and law in the Soviet Union for the first time since the brief period between the February and October Revolutions of 1917. As Communist Party rule and information monopoly no longer exerted its enormous power over media and society, perestroika developed a life of its own.
In a new spirit of optimism, the population of the Soviet Union took itself, its history, its present and future to task. Journalists were among the first to test and overcome the limits of what could be said and done; along the way, they also reinvented themselves. Established newspapers and magazines changed their image and content and became more interesting to the readers. New, independent publications could be initiated, especially after the ‘Law (of 1990) on the Press and Other Mass Media.’
In March 1991, there were over 8,000 registered newspapers and magazines in various languages, half of which were newly founded. Many newly launched newspapers were probably not even counted. In this arguably decisive period of the late Soviet Union, every newspaper had its own history, circumstances and actors. Together, as media in a highly mediatized society, they surely shaped the era of late reform and early transformation, its images, moods and perceptions. They highlight perestroika as a history of communication in a multi-layered process.
While a body of research literature on the press does exist, there remains room for further exploration. Developments were far from uniform or confined to the two ‘capitals’. Besides an evolving political spectrum, journalistic initiatives across the multiethnic Soviet Union remain largely unexplored. There is a great need for individual analytical case studies, especially at the grassroots level and the multiethnic periphery. Also, many journalists who were active at the time can report first-hand on their experiences.
This workshop aims to investigate the ‘window of opportunities’ for independent newspaper journalism that opened up during perestroika. It seeks to contribute to an exploration of the history of this period with a focus on its beginnings, thus avoiding equating reforms with ‘collapse’ a priori , but also paying attention to dynamics that are usually only associated with the later transformation. For journalism in the national republics, the approach of independence in 1991 certainly colours how the perestroika period is viewed. Yet we also encourage analyses of how press practices themselves changed. We would like to invite newspaper analyses as individual case studies covering all areas previously pertaining to the Soviet Union, but especially the – multilingual – peripheries.
We are interested in the following fields of questions :
Structures and agency
Temporalities
Visual aspects of perestroika newspapers
The workshop is intended to bring together two groups :
Applicants will be informed of the acceptance of their proposal by 15 November 2025 .
The working language of the workshop will be English. A publication of contributions is planned with a preliminary submission deadline of 31 May 2026.
The organizers will provide accommodation in Helsinki for the duration of the workshop. Travel costs will be reimbursed after the workshop depending on budget availability with early career researchers, participants from post-Soviet states (excluding Russia and Belarus) and scholars in exiletaking precedence.
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