Ethical and Hermeneutical Reflections on War, Violence, and Responsibility
Listening to Ukrainian Voices
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:17th Nov '25
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This book employs an interdisciplinary lens to help readers understand why Russia invaded Ukraine, as well as why and by what means it continues to wage war against the Ukrainian people, state, nation, culture, and the country’s environmental well-being.
Through listening to, learning from, and analytically engaging Ukrainian intellectuals, Cynthia R. Nielsen in Ethical and Hermeneutical Reflections on War, Violence, and Responsibility: Listening to Ukrainian Voices demonstrates that Russia is not only carrying out an unjust war of aggression against Ukraine but also exposes how its use of (pseudo)History, gender narratives, information warfare, religious discourses, and other forms of propaganda have laid the groundwork for the present war and function to maintain it. By bringing contemporary Ukrainian voices such as Serhiy Zhadan and Olexsandr Myhked into conversation with hermeneutical, moral, and political philosophy and utilizing discourse analysis to explain Russia’s imperial identity, we not only gain a better understanding of why Russia invaded Ukraine, but also a clearer picture of how war in the 21st century impacts human lives and communities, culture, language, the information sphere, as well as the toll it takes on non-human animals and the environment.
This book is an excellent supplement for anyone who is preparing to teach on Ukraine, Russia, Central and Eastern Europe, and the wars in post-modernity.
Cynthia Nielsen is a creative scholar who offers here a series of connected essays drawing on disciplines ranging from philosophy to discourse analysis to history and literary studies in order to explicate the Russian war in Ukraine. Readers encounter Ukrainian voices wrestling with the unspeakable. Nielsen’s book is a bold and successful effort to articulate the human experience of life in a time and place of shocking and unjustifiable trauma.
Susan P. McCaffray, Professor Emerita, Department of History, University of North Carolina Wilmington
Adopting fascist tenets, Putin pursues his geopolitical objectives by erasing Ukraine and Ukrainian identity. Cynthia Nielsen offers a meticulous analysis of falsified and manipulative narratives entrenched in Russian society and dexterously employed by the Kremlin in Russia’s war against Ukraine.
Nataliya Shpylova-Saeed, author ofRussia’s Denial of Ukraine: Letters and Contested Memory
In this timely and penetrating book, Cynthia Nielsen offers a tautly woven meditation on the power of language during times of war, both in its deceitful capacity to rationalize mass violence and destruction and its ability to articulate hope, debunk falsehood, and affirm stubborn truths.
Michael Gorham, Professor of Russian Studies, University of Florida
ISBN: 9781032778419
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 460g
160 pages