'Gaufman’s witty and engaging study of Russian patriotic identity practices on and off the Internet is a treasure trove of invaluable insights. If you want to understand the country’s political and everyday culture since its first invasion of Ukraine, this is a great place to start.' Eliot Borenstein, Professor of Russian and Slavic Studies, New York University'Gaufman reminds us of the power of the everyday, including when discussing international affairs. Her granular approach to micro-practices and discourses offers a rare window into the way Russians view and practise foreign policy. A must-read book to reshape our knowledge of Russia and capture the roots of the current crisis.'Marlene Laruelle, The George Washington University'Gaufman's book is a timely and compelling account of the myriad ways that Russians extend and embody Russia's foreign policy through their everyday practices. The book takes readers on a whirlwind tour of patriotic consumption (buying and eating), manifestations of societal militarization, popular support for food sanctions, canceling of family vacations in Turkey, embracing of Trump's conspiratorial vision of the American establishment and international order, policing of the conjugal order at the World Cup, and panic buying during the Covid-19 pandemic. By focusing on the everyday, the book complements existing works that frame Russia's foreign policy as imperialist, an extension of Putin's authoritarian rule, or a product of memory politics. At a time when the world struggles to understand Russian identity in relation to the war in Ukraine, Gaufman provides essential context and insight. For scholars and students, the book further presents an important theoretical intervention in deftly weaving together the growing bodies of research on international practices and everyday nationalism.' Paul Goode, McMillan Chair in Russian Studies, Carleton University'Gaufman presents an engaging and insightful understanding of the ways that foreign policy decisions and ramifications are understood and interpreted at the level of regular people. She does an excellent job of advancing her project of bringing together the study of foreign policy together with nationalism studies. This book should serve as a model for other scholars interested in exploring these rich connections. Ultimately, such work can help make foreign policy much more tangible and less abstract as we better understand how we all encounter it and react to it every day.'Jacob Lassin, H-War, H-Net Reviews'Can we consider the everyday actions of ordinary people, such as marketing and consumer decisions, in response to international events as foreign policy? Elizaveta Gaufman argues that we can and demonstrates convincingly how ordinary people enact foreign policy in their everyday lives. Gaufman's book distinguishes itself from other literature on everyday conceptualisations by focusing on micro-practices and enmeshed not only in physical but also digital spaces. Furthermore, by investigating how ordinary people accept and justify the Kremlin's foreign-policy practices, the book provides a much-needed perspective on the dynamics of public support for foreign policies in authoritarian states. In this respect, Gaufman offers readers a fascinating living account of how ordinary pro-Kremlin Russian citizens talk, shop and eat, and even how their judgement of other people's intimate relationships occurs through a foreign-policy lens.' Zerrin Torun, Europe-Asia Studies