The Western understanding of what happened in Ukraine during World War II has been shaped by historical and ideological constructs created in the Kremlin. The Ukrainian specificity has been dissolved in the concept of the “great victorious Russian people” and distorted by attempts to equate Ukrainian nationalists to German Nazis, while the occupation and colonization of Ukraine by Russian Bolsheviks in the 1920s and 1930s has widely been ignored or artificially silenced.
In her Four Essays on World War II, Olena Stiazhkina inscribes the Ukrainian history of the war into a wider European and world context.
The Soviet and contemporary Russian narratives about World War II have been used to justify the Kremlin’s policies towards democratic countries. Today, Russia re-mains deeply engaged in the falsification of the past, which underpins the claims of the so-called “Russian World” and the ongoing war against Ukraine.
Olena Stiazhkina’s book promotes a new, historically adequate understanding of what happened in Ukraine before, during, and after World War II.
Author(s): Olena Stiazhkina
Series: Ukrainian Voices, 10
Publisher: ibidem Press
Year: 2021
Language: English
Pages: 294
City: Stuttgart
Contents
Preface
Essay I World War II in the Life and Death of Ukrainians: An Attempt to Adjust the Methodological Framework
Essay II The Regime of Continuous War: Mobilization, Militarization, and Practices of Maintaining an Undeclared State of Emergency in Soviet Ukraine From the 1920s to the 1940s
Essay III Occupation Regimes in Ukrainian Lands: Establishment and Fall/Stabilization, Similarities and Differences
Essay IV Ukraine in 1943–1953: Re-Sovietization and an Unexpected Turn of the Unfinished War
Abbreviations
Index