Post-Soviet Graffiti

Free Speech in Authoritarian States


with author

Alexis M. Lerner


moderated by

Harris Mylonas

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

3:00 - 4:30 pm


Elliott School of International Affairs

1957 E St NW | Washington, DC 20052

Voesar Conference Room | 4th Floor

This event is on record and open to the media.

For more than a decade, Alexis Lerner combed the alleyways, underpasses, and public squares of cities once under communist rule, from Berlin in the west to Vladivostok in the east, recording thousands of cases of critical and satirical political street art and cataloging these artworks linguistically and thematically across space and time. Complemented by first-hand interviews with leading artists, activists, and politicians from across the region, Post-Soviet Graffiti provides theoretical reflection on public space as a site for political action, a semiotic reading of signs and symbols, and street art as a form of text.


The book answers the question of how we conceptualize avenues of dissent under authoritarian rule by showing how contemporary graffiti functions not only as a popular public aesthetic, but also as a mouthpiece of political sentiment, especially within the post-Soviet region and post-communist Europe. A purposefully anonymous and accessible artform, graffiti is an effective tool for circumventing censorship and expressing political views. This is especially true for marginalized populations and for those living in otherwise closed and censored states.


Post-Soviet Graffiti reveals that graffiti does not exist in a vacuum; rather, it can be read as a narrative about a place, the people who live there, and the things that matter to them.

Author

Dr. Alexis M. Lerner is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the United States Naval Academy. Her research is on the intersection of authoritarianism and dissent, with a regional focus on Russia and the post-Soviet region. Prior to the USNA, Dr. Lerner was a Presidential Data Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Western Ontario (2020-2021), a Visiting Scholar at Columbia University’s Harriman Institute (2017-2019), a Visiting Research Fellow at the Leonard Davis Institute for International Relations at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (2016-2017), and the Director of Research for the Stanford University US-Russia Forum (2016-2018).

Moderator

Harris Mylonas is Associate Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, a lifetime member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and editor-in-chief of Nationalities Papers. His research focuses on nation- and state-building, migration, diaspora policies, and political development. He is the author of The Politics of Nation-Building: Making Co-Nationals, Refugees, and Minorities and, most recently, the co-author (with Maya Tudor) of Varieties of Nationalism: Communities, Narratives, Identities.

The Institute for European, Russian and Eurasian Studies (IERES)
Elliott School of International Affairs, George Washington University
1957 E Street, NW / Suite 412 / Washington, DC 20052
Tel (202) 994-6340 / Fax (202) 994-5436 / Email ieresgwu@gwu.edu