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The Making of a Media Nation
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25 August 2026

— Alexander Etkind, Professor of International Relations, Central European University, Budapest
Bohdan Shumylovych’s research makes an essential contribution to understanding national dynamics within the late USSR and exemplifies how television— both a propaganda tool and a popular medium —was able to promote the gradual emancipation of national cultures under a regime of Soviet censorship and centralization.
— Ioulia Shukan, Professor of Sociology, School for Advanced Social Studies (EHESS), Paris
Dr. Bohdan Shumylovych studied Art History and Modern History in Lviv, Budapest, and Florence. He teaches as Associate Professor of Cultural Studies at the Ukrainian Catholic University in Lviv. Since 2008, he has also been affiliated with the Center for Urban History in Lviv, where he initiated the Urban Video Collections, headed the Urban Media Archive, and later engaged in public history projects. Following the outbreak of Russia’s full-scale war against Ukraine, he began collecting war diaries and ego-documents, with a particular focus on dreams. The results of this project were published in Psychosocial and Cultural Perspectives on the War in Ukraine: Imprints and Dreamscapes (Routledge 2023), co-edited with Magdalena Zolkos. His work has appeared in, among other outlets, Euxeinos, Colloquia Humanistica, TerGestina, IMAGES: The International Journal of European Film, Performing Arts and Audiovisual Communication, NECSUS: European Journal of Media Studies, Journal of Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society, Nationalities Papers, Studies in Eastern European Cinema, Ukraïna Moderna, Eurozine, and KinoKultura.