Odesa: identity, resistance, and imperial legacy

Date and time:

Tuesday 6 May, 2025
18:30 - 20:00

Location:

Swedenborg Hall
20-21 Bloomsbury Way
London
WC1A 2TH

Odesa is one of Russia’s most coveted prizes in its war of aggression and occupation against Ukraine. It is struck almost nightly by drone and missile attacks. Odesa has also been the target of Russian propaganda and disinformation. Historically, a largely Russophone city, and one with a past closely linked to Russian imperialism, Odesa has been a central part of the Russian myth that claims Russian-speaking Ukrainians as part of the ‘Russian world’, and that has been used to justify the brutal invasions of 2014 and 2022. 

Odesa, however, has always had its own, distinctive, multicultural identity, one that belongs to no empire and resists easy categorisation. 

Today, Russian violence and propaganda have provoked its inhabitants to reimagine their city as a place of Ukrainian anti-imperial resistance. But these processes are complex, and nowhere are Ukraine’s cultural dilemmas around the imperial and Soviet past felt more acutely than here. 

Join us for a discussion featuring Odesans and foreign observers, as they explore Odesa’s identities and histories in the light of its dramatic present, and try to overcome some of the myths that still surround this unique city.

Organised in partnership with University College London and the British Academy.

The Ukrainian Institute London is an independent charity entirely funded through donations, ticket sales, and project grants. All proceeds from ticket sales directly support our programme.

Odesa: identity, resistance, and imperial legacy

£15 General admission

£12 Student