SPECIAL SECTION: MULTILINGUALISM IN UKRAINEIntroduction: Ukraine s MultilingualismRORY FINNIN and IVAN KOZACHENKOThe Languages and Tongues of Mykola MarkevychTARAS KOZNARSKYChannel Switching: Language Change and the ConversionTrope in Modern Ukrainian LiteratureMYROSLAV SHKANDRIJLinguistic Conversion in Ukraine: Nation-Building on the SelfLAADA BILANIUKUkrainian Cinema and the Challenges of Multilingualism:From the 1930s to the PresentVITALY CHERNETSKY I Will Understand You, Brother, Just Like You Will UnderstandMe : Multilingualism in the Songs of the War in DonbasIRYNA SHUVALOVAREPORTS:Multilingualism in the Academy: Language Dynamics inUkraine s Higher Education InstitutionsOLENKA BILASHLanguage Use among Crimean Tatars in Ukraine:Context and PracticeALINA ZUBKOVYCHSPECIAL SECTION: ISSUES IN THE HISTORY AND MEMORYOF THE OUN IIIIntroduction: The Organization of Ukrainian Nationalistsand European Fascism During World War IIANDREAS UMLAND AND YULIYA YURCHUKThe OUN(b), the Germans, and Anti-Jewish Violence inEastern Galicia during Summer 1941KAI STRUVEThe Biography of the OUN(m) Activist Oleksa Babii in theLight of his Memoirs on Escaping Execution (1942)YURI RADCHENKOThe Ustasas and Fascism: Abolitionism, Revolution,and Ideology (1929 42)TOMISLAV DULIC AND GORAN MILJANREVIEWSKsenia Maksimovtsova, Language Conflicts in ContemporaryEstonia, Latvia, and Ukraine: A Comparative Exploration ofDiscourses in Post-Soviet Russian-Language Digital MediaOLGA KHABIBULINAMari?lle Wijermars and Katja Lehtisaari (eds.), Freedom ofExpression in Russia s New MediasphereOLENA NEDOZHOGINANadja Douglas, Public Control of Armed Forces in the RussianFederationOLEKSII POLTORAKOV ABOUT THE GUEST EDITORS AND CONTRIBUTORS