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Shaping Identity in Eastern Europe and Russia
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Shaping Identity in Eastern Europe and Russia

Forfatter:
innbundet, 1993
Engelsk
The Ukraine's emergence as an independent state in 1991 was not accompanied by violence due, it may be argued, to the weak national consciousness of most of its citizens. In part, this was the legacy of an historiography imposed by its rulers, who played down or ignored the Soviet Union's diversity and the past tensions among its peoples so as to legitimize a supranational "Soviet" identity. The official history of the multinational state ruled from St Petersburg and Moscow bowdlerized the past and eroded the collective memory of each constituent nationality. The author compares Soviet and Polish accounts of the Ukraine's past, examines how "national history" was written and how its interpretation changed in each country. This book provides an account of how historical writing was used to build and destroy nations and states, and is particularly relevant today in the light of recent events in Eastern Europe. By the author of "National History as Cultural Process".
Undertittel
Soviet and Polish Accounts of Ukrainian History, 1914-1991
Forfatter
S. Velychenko
Opplag
1993 ed.
ISBN
9780312085520
Språk
Engelsk
Vekt
446 gram
Utgivelsesdato
22.6.1993
Antall sider
266