Analyzing Far-Right Telegram Channels as Constituents of Information Autocracy in Russia
Polina Smirnova, Mykola Makhortykh

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how Russian far-right Telegram channels produce propaganda through memes, shaping perceptions of political figures and supporting authoritarian legitimacy within Russia's information autocracy.
Contribution
It introduces a large-scale, computer vision-based analysis of far-right memes, revealing their role in co-producing propaganda and legitimizing authoritarian narratives.
Findings
Far-right memes legitimize Russian leaders as heroic.
Memes depict opponents as corrupt or weak.
Communities generate bottom-up narratives supporting regime ideology.
Abstract
This study examines how Russian far-right communities on Telegram shape perceptions of political figures through memes and visual narratives. Far from passive spectators, these actors co-produce propaganda, blending state-aligned messages with their own extremist framings. In Russia, such groups are central because they articulate the ideological foundations of the war against Ukraine and reflect the regime's gradual drift toward ultranationalist rhetoric. Drawing on a dataset of 200,000 images from expert-selected far-right Telegram channels, the study employs computer vision and unsupervised clustering to identify memes featuring Russian (Putin, Shoigu) and foreign politicians (Zelensky, Biden, Trump) and to reveal recurrent visual patterns in their representation. By leveraging the large-scale and temporal depth of this dataset, the analysis uncovers differential patterns of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMisinformation and Its Impacts · Global Security and Public Health · Populism, Right-Wing Movements
