Laboratories of Terror explores the final chapter of Stalin's Great Terror in Soviet Ukraine. When the Communist Party Central Committee and the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR halted mass operations in repression in November 1938, large numbers of mainly Communist purge victims whose cases remained incomplete were released. At the same time, hundreds of NKVD operatives who had carried out the Great Terror were scapegoated and arrested. Drawing on materials from the largely closed archives of the Soviet security police, this collection of essays by an international team of researchers illuminates the previously opaque world of the NKVD perpetrator. It uncovers the mechanics and logistics of the terror at the local level by examining the criminal files of a series of mid-level NKVD operatives from across Ukraine. The result offers new perspectives on both Stalin's central role in the architecture of the terror and NKVD perpetrators' agency in implementing one of the
most horrific episodes of twentieth-century mass violence.
Author(s): Lynne Viola, Marc-Stephan Junge
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 239
City: New York
Cover
Half Title
Laboratories of Terror
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgments
Contributors and Translators
Glossary
Introduction—Lynne Viola and Marc Junge
1. “The Party Will Demand a Full Reckoning”: Korablev and the Vinnitsa NKVD—Valeriy Vasylyev and Roman Podkur
2. “The Party Makes Mistakes, the NKVD—Never”: The NKVD in Odessa—Andrei Savin and Aleksei Tepliakov
3. “A Sacrificial Offering”: Karamyshev and the Nikolaev NKVD—Marc Junge
4. “Enemies Within”: Pertsov and the NKVD in Kharkov and Odessa—Vadym Zolotar’ov
5. “Under the Dictation of Fleishman”: The NKVD in Skvira—Lynne Viola
6. “The Situation at the Time”: The NKVD in Zhitomir—Serhii Kokin
7. “This Is How You Interrogate and Secure Testimony”: Kocherginskii and the Northern Donetsk Railway NKVD—Jeffrey J. Rossman
Index