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Ukraine and in the Empire 8 Z
GW ISSN 0001 - 0545 B 20004 F fieedmfa Indivicka/sf (left) Ukrainians and Afghans in Denmark protesting against Russian occupation of their countries. (right) Ukrainians in Great Britain demonstrating against genocide and persecution of freedom fighters of their fatherland. Verlagspostamt: Miinchen 2 January - February 1985 Vol. XXXVI. No. C O N T E N T S : Three More Victims of Russian Terror . 6 B. Ozerskyj The Situation in Ukraine and in the Empire 8 Z. Karpyshyn (USA) Developments in Europe and the USSR . 12 Dr. A. I lie (Croatia) Croats are not Y u g o s la v s ...............................16 V. Berko (Slovakia) The Political Situation in Slovakia . 19 Father Paul Marx The Forgotten Holocaust in Afghanistan . 20 Ex-prisoner on Trial for Memoirs . 21 Victims of Russian T e r r o r ...............................22 Statement of the European Freedom Council 24 Eric Brodin (USA) ‘1984’ for Over 25 Years in Cuba . 26 Slava Stetsko, M.A. ABN A ctiv ities.............................................................28 News and V iew s.............................................................34 From Behind the Iron Curtain .... 42 Book R e v ie w s .............................................................46 Publisher and Owner (Verleger und In It is not our practice haber): American Friends of the Anti- to pay for contributed materials. Bolshevik Bloc of Nations (AF ABN), Reproduction permitted but only 136 Second Avenue, New York, N. Y. with indication of source (ABN-Corr.). 10003, USA. Annual subscription: Zweigstelle Deutschland: Zeppelinstr. 67, 18 Dollars in the USA, and the equivalent 8000 München 80. of 18 Dollars in all other countries. Editorial Staff: Board of Editors. Remittances to Deutsche Bank, Munich, Editor-in-Chief: Mrs. -
European Science Review
European science review № 3–4 2015 March–April «East West» Association for Advanced Studies and Higher Education GmbH Vienna 2015 European Sciences review Scientific journal № 3–4 2015 (March–April) ISSN 2310-5577 Editor-in-chief Lucas Koenig, Austria Consulting editors Uwe Eisenberg, Austria Minik Olsen, Sweden International editorial board Melinda Boros, Hungary Miroslavka Murkovič, Slovenia Jana Ilyna, Russia Wu Pan, China Dragan Novak, Croatia Dirk Eggers, Germany Yashkova Tatiana, Russia Proofreading Kristin Theissen Cover design Andreas Vogel Additional design Stephan Friedman Editorial office European Science Review “East West” Association for Advanced Studies and Higher Education GmbH, Am Gestade 1 1010 Vienna, Austria Email: [email protected] Homepage: www.ew-a.org European Science Review is an international, German/English/Russian language, peer-reviewed journal. It is published bimonthly with circulation of 1000 copies. The decisive criterion for accepting a manuscript for publication is scientific quality. All research articles published in this journal have undergone a rigorous peer review. Based on initial screening by the editors, each paper is anonymized and reviewed by at least two anonymous referees. Recommending the articles for publishing, the reviewers confirm that in their opinion the submitted article contains important or new scientific results. Instructions for authors Full instructions for manuscript preparation and submission can be found through the “East West” Association GmbH home page at: http://www.ew-a.org. Material disclaimer The opinions expressed in the conference proceedings do not necessarily reflect those of the «East West» Association for Advanced Studies and Higher Education GmbH, the editor, the editorial board, or the organization to which the authors are affiliated. -
'The Power of Pearls': Memoir of a Russian Jewish Immigrant to the American South
Clemson University TigerPrints All Theses Theses 5-2016 'The oP wer of Pearls': Memoir of a Russian Jewish Immigrant to the American South Leah Cannon Burnham Clemson University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://tigerprints.clemson.edu/all_theses Recommended Citation Burnham, Leah Cannon, "'The oP wer of Pearls': Memoir of a Russian Jewish Immigrant to the American South" (2016). All Theses. 2394. https://tigerprints.clemson.edu/all_theses/2394 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses at TigerPrints. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Theses by an authorized administrator of TigerPrints. For more information, please contact [email protected]. “THE POWER OF PEARLS”: MEMOIR OF A RUSSIAN JEWISH IMMIGRANT TO THE AMERICAN SOUTH A Thesis Presented to the Graduate School of Clemson University In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirement for the Degree Master of Arts History by Leah Cannon Burnham May 2016 Accepted by: Dr. Steven Marks, Committee Chair Dr. Alan Grubb Dr. Megan Shockley ABSTRACT Abe Wolfe Davidson was a Russian Jewish artist who immigrated to the South in 1922. He created public and private sculpture and encouraged artistic culture in the region. Davidson wrote an autobiography prior to passing away in 1981 and his daughters donated the unpublished memoir to the Clemson Special Collections. He provides an insider’s perspective to artistic culture in the region during the first half of the twentieth century. His memoir also describes life in the Jewish Pale of Settlement and the immigrant experience in the American South. This thesis analyzes the historical significance of Davidson and the value of his memoir. -
Social Change and National Consciousness in Twentieth-Century Ukraine
KRAWCHENKO BOHDAN SOCIAL CHANGE AND NATIONAL CONSCIOUSNESS IN TWENTIETH-CENTURY UKRAINE Soviet leaders are constantly alert to the danger of unrest among the nations which make up the Soviet Union. Whether discontent will pose a serious challenge to Russian domination of the USSR will largely depend on developments in Ukraine. Among the fifteen republics comprising the Soviet Union, Ukraine is second only to Russia in population and in economic and political importance. But rapid social change, integration into the USSR and the experience of intensive Russification policies have surely affected the national allegiances of Ukrainians. Is mobilisation around national demands therefore unlikely? Pursuing this question, the author examines the effects of social and political change in twentieth-century Ukraine on the national consciousness of Ukrainian workers, peasants, the intelligentsia and political elite. Dr Krawchenko argues that the modernisation of Ukrainian society has produced a new structure of national consciousness, one which should not be mistaken for a weakening of that consciousness. For the modern Ukrainian, the source of national discontent is socio- economic, rather than cultural. The crisis in Ukrainians’ social mobility and the republic’s lagging economic development are some of the factors which have contributed to the formation of the USSR’s most restive working class, intelligentsia and political elite. Faced with mounting contradictions in Ukraine, the Russian leaders of the USSR have attempted to resolve the problem by accelerating Russification and central control over the institutions of the republic. Rather than solving the problem, these policies have generated new national conflicts. Dr Bohdan Krawchenko is Director of the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies at the University of Alberta. -
Envisioning Siberia: Siberian Regionalism Through Evolution and Revolution
Georgia State University ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University History Dissertations Department of History 8-12-2016 Envisioning Siberia: Siberian Regionalism through Evolution and Revolution Anthony Johnson Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/history_diss Recommended Citation Johnson, Anthony, "Envisioning Siberia: Siberian Regionalism through Evolution and Revolution." Dissertation, Georgia State University, 2016. https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/history_diss/53 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Department of History at ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. It has been accepted for inclusion in History Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ENVISIONING SIBERIA: SIBERIAN REGIONALISM THROUGH EVOLUTION AND REVOLUTION by ANTHONY W. JOHNSON Under the Direction of Hugh D. Hudson, Jr., PhD ABSTRACT As the Russian government enacted the Great Reforms of the 1850s and 1860s, Siberian students in St. Petersburg at the time came to the realization that urban, judicial, and land reforms had to take place in Siberia in order for the region to develop. Starting with meetings of the Siberian Circle in the capital, regionalists strove to elevate Siberia’s socio-political position within the Russian Empire. Regionalists believed that the Russian government envisioned Siberia exclusively as a place of exile and hard labor, as a territory for natural resources, and as a region unworthy of any real development. The chief theorists of regionalism, Grigorii Nikolaevich Potanin and Nikolai Mikhailovich Iadrintsev, sought to reconceptualize the relationship between European Russia and Siberia while publicizing regional needs. For regionalists, ending the system of Siberian exile, fostering the development of education, and pushing Siberia’s political and economic development would make Siberia a vital and vibrant region of the empire and end Siberia’s traditionally subservient status. -
The Ukrainian Weekly 1984, No.20
www.ukrweekly.com as OSH Published by the Ukrainian National Association Inc., a fraternal non-profit association! an X monn> t n -1 Я —r– j -z o - О O Z Ш H - от - о < s–1 z - e za WAY -j. 7 Щ- \ wo -c rainian У о - " Vol. Lll No. 20 THE UKRAINIAN WEEKLY SUNDAY, MAY 13,1984 25 cents Famine bill goes to State Department; Aleksei Nikitin is dead; gains more co-sponsors in Congress fought for workers' rights in USSR WASHINGTON - House Resolu In the Senate, Sen. Bradley on May 7 tion 4459, known as the "Ukrainian sent a "Dear Colleague" letter to all by Bohdan Nahaylo Famine Bill," has received more co- members asking them to co-sponsor S sponsors and was recently referred to 2456. MUNICH - The recent death has the State Department for study and Recent co-sponsors of the bill in the been reported of the leading Soviet comments, according to Americans for House are Reps. Howard Berman (D– workers'-rights campaigner and poli Human Rights in Ukraine. Calif.), Lawrence G. Smith (D-Fla.), tical prisoner Aleksei Nikitin. A The bill, which was introduced in the Bill Young (D-FIa.) and Benjamin long-standing victim of the political House by Rep. James Florio (D-N.J.) Gilman (R-N.Y.), bringing the total abuse of psychiatry, the 47-year old and in the Senate as S 2456 by Sen. Bill number of sponsors in the House to 84. former coal-mining engineer from Bradley (D-N.J.), calls forthe establish On the Senate side, Sen. -
The Barents Sea, the White Sea, the Kara Sea)
Chronology of the Key Historical Events on the Western Seas of the Russian Arctic (the Barents Sea, the White Sea, the Kara Sea) Ninth century 870–890 The travel of Otar, a Viking from the Norwegian province of Hologaland (now Helgeland), who discovered the way to the White Sea. The story of this journey was recorded from his own words by the English King, Alfred the Great. 9th–10th century The beginning of the Russian advance to the north and northeast and their appearance on the shores of the White Sea and the Barents Sea. Tenth century 920 The Viking Eirik Bloodaxe sailed in the mouth of the Northern Dvina (it was called “Vina” in the sagas). 965 The son of Eirik Bloodaxe, the Viking Harald Grey Cloak made a trip to the mouth of the Northern Dvina. Eleventh century 11th century The people of Novgorod, coming out of the White Sea, won Biarmia, the country located on the Pechora River and the Northern Dvina. 1026 The mouth of the Northern Dvina was visited by the Viking Torer Dog, who first engaged in peaceful trade but ended up plundering the temple of Iomala (supposedly located on the site of the current Kholmogory). Twelfth century 12th century (first The mention in the annals of the Terskiy Shore (the White Sea Throat), among Novgorod’s half) possessions. 1110 or 1130 The archbishop of Novgorod, John, founded a monastery of the Archangel Michael (at the mouth of the Northern Dvina), at which there was a settlement, an early precursor of the port and the city of Arkhangelsk. -
The Power State Is Back?
The Power State Is Back? Almost 25 years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the process of ‘re-composition’ of a Moscow-dominated political space is still under way. Under the influence of different traditions, factors, events and interests, Russia seems to have developed a new version The Power of the ‘power state’ that dominated European history until the 20th century’s tragedies. What was the weight of the Soviet legacy and of the crises of the 1990s in this development? What has been the influence of polit- ical leaders and intellectuals, siloviki, and economic elites on the State Is Back? current Russian political thought? To what extent have external factors contributed to shape this thought? What place for minori- The Evolution of Russian ties and cultural differences does this political trend leave? This volume is based on the proceedings of ‘The Evolution of Rus- sian Political Thought After 1991’ workshop organized by Reset- Political Thought After 1991 Dialogues on Civilizations (Berlin, 22-23 June 2015) and collects the essays written by Pavel K. Baev, Giancarlo Bosetti, Timothy J. Colton, Riccardo Mario Cucciolla, Alexander Golts, Lev Gudkov, Stephen E. Hanson, Mark Kramer, Marlene Laruelle, Alexey Miller, Olga Pavlenko and Victoria I. Zhuravleva. I libri di Reset Baev, Bosetti, Colton, Golts ISBN 978-88-98593-16-3 Gudkov, Hanson, Kramer, Laruelle 20,00 Miller, Pavlenko, Zhuravleva 9 788898 593163 edited by Riccardo Mario Cucciolla I libri di Reset The Power State Is Back? The Evolution of Russian Political Thought After 1991 Edited by Riccardo Mario Cucciolla Contents I libri di Reset Presenting ‘The Russia Workshop’ 7 A New Insight on Contemporary Russia Director Giancarlo Bosetti Giancarlo Bosetti Preface 11 The Importance of Understanding Contemporary Russia Riccardo Mario Cucciolla Introduction 23 What Do We Mean by ‘Russian Political Thought’? Timothy J. -
The KGB in Afghanistan
WORKING PAPER #40 The KGB in Afghanistan By Vasiliy Mitrokhin, July 2002. -Updated July 2009 THE COLD WAR INTERNATIONAL HISTORY PROJECT WORKING PAPER SERIES Christian F. Ostermann, Series Editor This paper is one of a series of Working Papers published by the Cold War International History Project of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, D.C. Established in 1991 by a grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Cold War International History Project (CWIHP) disseminates new information and perspectives on the history of the Cold War as it emerges from previously inaccessible sources on “the other side” of the post-World War II superpower rivalry. The project supports the full and prompt release of historical materials by governments on all sides of the Cold War, and seeks to accelerate the process of integrating new sources, materials and perspectives from the former “Communist bloc” with the historiography of the Cold War which has been written over the past few decades largely by Western scholars reliant on Western archival sources. It also seeks to transcend barriers of language, geography, and regional specialization to create new links among scholars interested in Cold War history. Among the activities undertaken by the project to promote this aim are a periodic BULLETIN to disseminate new findings, views, and activities pertaining to Cold War history; a fellowship program for young historians from the former Communist bloc to conduct archival research and study Cold War history in the United States; international scholarly meetings, conferences, and seminars; and publications. The CWIHP Working Paper Series is designed to provide a speedy publications outlet for historians associated with the project who have gained access to newly-available archives and sources and would like to share their results. -
1 Russian Nation-Building from Yeltsin to Medvedev
Russian nation-building from Yeltsin to Medvedev: Ethnic, civic, or purposefully ambiguous? Oxana Shevel Department of Political Science Tufts University Packard Hall Medford, MA, 02155, USA [email protected] https://wikis.uit.tufts.edu/confluence/display/~osheve01 Tel: +1-617-627-2658 Fax: 617-627-3660 Draft: do not circulate or cite without author’s permission 1 Abstract: This study surveys nation-building efforts in post-Soviet Russia, showing how all five dominant ways of imagining the “true” Russian nation have been fraught with contradictions and therefore could not easily guide state policies. Nevertheless, a solution to Russian nation-building dilemma may be emerging. This solution does not resolve the contradictions associated with each of the nation-building agendas but instead legalizes ambiguous definition of nation’s boundaries in the 1999 law on compatriots. The fuzzy definition of compatriots in the law allows Russia to pursue a variety of objectives and to target at a variety of groups without solving contradictions of existing nation- building discourses. 2 1. Introduction. Russia’s nation-building process – the search to define the “us” and the “other” of the Russian state – has been, to quote former President Putin, an “age-old Russian pastime” (Putin 2007), and has remained a priority for the Russian political and intellectual elites in the post-Soviet era (Tolz 2004, p. 177). The next section examines the politics of nation-building in post-Soviet Russia, focusing in particular on why both civic and ethnic nation-building agendas proved hard to articulate and implement. Section three shows how state policies during Yeltsin, Putin, and Medvedev presidencies have been affected by these contradictions and ambiguities.