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Discursive Shifts in the Fortress Kyiv Telegram Channel

ABOUT THE CASE

This project traces and visualises discursive shifts in the monthly frequencies of symbolic mentions and discursive strategies over the span of nearly three years on the Fortress Kyiv Telegram channel. Katarina analyses how Telegram users engage with war-related symbols as dynamic semiotic resources whose meanings are continuously negotiated. The chart demonstrates this approach on a selection of Telegram posts. In doing so, it introduces another level of contestation, through a juxtaposition of Katarina's interpretation and possible counter-perspectives.

This project examines symbolic contestation in the context of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine through the analysis of a single, prominent pro-Ukraine Telegram channel (Fortress Kyiv). Since February 2022, Telegram has become a key platform for wartime communication, where symbols circulate rapidly and acquire heightened political and affective significance. In this environment, war-related symbols such as Russia’s “Z” and “V” emblems and the Ukrainian slogan Slava Ukraini operate as condensed carriers of meaning, enabling users to articulate resistance, belonging, and moral positioning.

The initial phase of the project focuses on how this Telegram channel engages in the contestation of such symbols over time. Rather than treating symbols as fixed or stable signifiers, the analysis approaches them as dynamic semiotic resources whose meanings are continuously negotiated. Attention is paid to both explicit forms of contestation – such as direct mockery, rejection, or inversion of Russian war symbols – and more subtle strategies, including irony, repetition, intertextual references, and affective framing. By following the channel longitudinally, the project aims to capture short-term reactions to specific events as well as longer-term shifts in symbolic emphasis and narrative construction.

The visualization displays monthly frequencies of symbolic mentions and discursive strategies over the span of nearly three years on the Fortress Kyiv Telegram channel. The left Y-axis tracks how often key symbols such as "Z," "V," "Putin," "Slava Ukraini"/"Glory to Ukraine" are mentioned, while the right Y-axis measures the application of Wodak’s DHA strategies (nomination, predication, argumentation, perspectivization, and intensification/mitigation). The spike in early 2022 indicates an immediate symbolic and rhetorical response to the invasion, followed by moments of intensified or diversified contestation as the war and its narratives evolve.

Methods

The project combines qualitative discourse analysis with exploratory computational tools. The primary analytical framework is the Discourse-Historical Approach (DHA), which enables the identification of contestation strategies while situating them within broader historical and political contexts. To support the initial mapping of the dataset, Communalytic was used to extract frequently occurring words, hashtags, and emojis, as well as to visualize temporal patterns. This tool was particularly suitable for identifying dominant themes, symbolic clusters, and moments of intensification, which then guided closer qualitative analysis.

Positionality

My approach to this material is shaped by long-term experience working with sensitive topics such as hate speech, contested symbols, nationalist discourse, and politically charged memory conflicts in both online and offline contexts. This background has informed a research practice that prioritizes contextual sensitivity, careful interpretation, and reflexivity, particularly when engaging with emotionally charged or polarizing material. Rather than approaching the Telegram data as neutral or detached content, I read it as situated communication produced under conditions of war, trauma, and existential threat. This perspective affects how symbolic expressions, repetition, and affective intensification are interpreted – not simply as rhetorical devices, but as meaningful responses within a high-stakes communicative environment.

Project expansion

As the research developed, the scope expanded to include additional Telegram channels, TikTok, and a broader symbolic repertoire (including cultural figures, monuments, and memory-related symbols). This expansion, however, is part of a separate, ongoing project and is not included in the visualization work discussed here, which focuses exclusively on the initial single-channel Telegram dataset.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Katarina Damčević is a researcher at IOS Regensburg whose work focuses on the semiotics of hate speech, contested symbols, and memory politics in post-conflict societies, with a particular emphasis on Southeast Europe. Her current research explores practices of symbolic contestation, interpretive authority, and semiotic governance. She is also an associate at the University of Tartu and the University of Rijeka, a member of the editorial team of Southeastern Europe (Brill), and a co-founder of the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Research in Southeast Europe at the University of Rijeka.