Journal of Ukrainian Studies

Journal of Ukrainian Studies

JOURNAL OF UKRAINIAN STUDIES Winter 1998 CONTRIBUTORS John-Paul Himka Jolanta T. P^kacz Feodosii Steblii Mark Baker David McDonald Journal of UKRAINIAN STUDIES Volume 23, Number 2 Winter 1998 Contributors John-Paul Himka Iolanta T. Pgkacz Feodosii Steblii Mark Baker David McDonald Editor Roman Senkus Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Editorial Board Zenon E. Kohut, David R. Marples, Marusia K. Petryshyn, Danylo Husar Struk, Frances Swyripa, Frank E. Sysyn, Maxim Tarnawsky Journal of Ukrainian Studies Advisory Board Olga Andriewsky (Trent University, Peterborough, Ontario), L’ubica Babotova (Presov University), laroslav Hrytsak (Institute of Historical Studies, Lviv State University), Heorhii Kasianov (Institute of the History of Ukraine, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Kyiv), Bohdan Krawchenko (Academy of Public Administration and Local Government, Kyiv), Marko Pavlyshyn (Monash University, Melbourne), lurii Shapoval (Institute of Political and Ethno-National Studies, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Kyiv), Myroslav Shkandrij (University of Manitoba, Winnipeg), Vladyslav Verstiuk (Institute of the History of Ukraine, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Kyiv) The Journal of Ukrainian Studies is published semiannually by the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies, University of Alberta, 352 Athabasca Hall, Edmonton, Alta., T6G 2E8, Canada. Telephone: (403) 492-2972; fax: (403) 492-4967; e-mail: [email protected]. Annual subscriptions are $26.75 (GST inch) for individuals and $37.45 (GST incl.) for libraries and institutions in Canada. Outside Canada annual subseription rates are U.S.$25.00 for individuals and U.S. $35.00 for libraries and institutions. See inside back cover for prices on available back issues. Subscribers outside of Canada should pay in U.S. funds. Subscriptions are payable at the above address by cheque or money order (made out to the Journal of Ukrainian Studies) or by VISA or MasterCard. Please do not send cash. The Journal publishes articles and book reviews in Ukrainian and Ukrainian- Canadian studies. Persons wishing to submit articles should first send a letter of inquiry and an abstract to the Editor, Journal of Ukrainian Studies, Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont., M5S lAl, Canada. Telephone: (416) 978-8669/978-6934; fax: (416) 978-2672; e-mail: [email protected]. For additional guidelines, see the note for contributors on the last page of this issue. Copyright © Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies, 1999. Printed in Canada. ISSN 0228-1635 Volume 23, Number 2 Winter 1998 Contents Articles Introduction / 1 John-Paul Himka The Transformation and Formation of Social Strata and Their Place in the Ukrainian National Movement in Nineteenth-Century Galicia / 3 Iolanta T. Pgkacz Galician Society as a Cultural Public, 1771-1914 / 23 Feodosii Steblii Vasyl Podolynsky’s Stowo przestrogi and Ukrainian-Polish Relations in Nineteenth-Century Galicia / 45 Mark Baker Lewis Namier and the Problem of Eastern Galicia / 59 Review Article David McDonald Nationhood and Its Discontents: Ukrainian Intellectual History at Empire’s End / 105 Book Reviews laroslav lu. Tynchenko, Ukrainske ofitserstvo: Shliakhy skorboty ta zabuttia. Chastyna 1: Biohrafichno-dovidkova (Orest Subtelny) / 117 Michael O. Logusz, Galicia Division: The Waffen-SS 14th Grenadier Division, 1943-1945 (Christine Anne Kulke) / 118 Eugeniusz Misilo, comp., Akcja “Wisla”: Dokumenty (John Jaworsky) / 120 Taras Kuzio, Ukraine under Kuchma: Political Reform, Economic Transformation and Security Policy in Independent Ukraine (David R. Marples) / 122 Yuri Shcherbak, The Strategic Role of Ukraine. Diplomatic Addresses and Lectures (1994-1997) (Taras Kuzio) / 124 Tor Bukvoll, Ukraine and European Security (Sherman Garnett) / 127 Anna Reid, Borderland: A Journey through the History of Ukraine (Frank E. Sysyn) / 129 Sukumar Periwal, ed.. Notions of Nationalism (John-Paul Himka) / 132 Dmytro Cyzevs'kyj, A History of Ukrainian Literature (From the 11th to the End of the 19th Century) (Marko Pavlyshyn) / 134 Tamara Hundorova, Prolavlennia slova: Dyskursiia rannoho ukrainskoho modernizmu. Postmoderna interpretatsiia (Myroslav Shkandrij) / 137 Oleh S. Ilnytzkyj, Ukrainian Futurism, 1914-1930: A Historical and Critical Study (Myroslav Shkandrij) / 138 Futuryzm na Ukrainie: Manifesty i teksty literackie, comp. Bazyli Nazaruk; Ukrainskyi futuryzm: Vybrani storinky, comp. Mykola Sulyma (Oleh S. Ilnytzkyj) / 142 Samuel H. Baron and Nancy Shields Kollmann, eds., Religion and Culture in Early Modern Russia and Ukraine (Serhii Plokhy) / 146 Michael Bourdeaux, ed., The Politics of Religion in Russia and the New States of Eurasia (Serhii Plokhy) / 147 Books Received / 149 Contributors Mark Baker is a Ph.D. student in history at Harvard University. John-Paul Himka is a professor of history at the University of Alberta. His monograph Religion and Nationality in Western Ukraine: The Greek Catholic Church and the Ruthenian National Movement in Galicia, 1867-1900 will be published by McGill-Queen’s University Press in 1999. David McDonald is an associate professor of history at the University of Wisconsin in Madison. A specialist in the institutional and intellectual history of the Russian Empire, he is the author of United Government and Foreign Policy in Russia, 1900- 1914 (Harvard University Press, 1992). JOLANTA T. Pekacz is a post-doctoral fellow at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario. Her monograph Conservative Tradition in Pre-Revolutionary France: Parisian Salon Women (New York: Peter Lang) will be published in 1999. Feodosii Steblii is a senior research fellow at the Institute of Ukrainian Studies (Lviv) of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. He is the author and editor of many publications in Galician history. Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2016 https://archive.org/details/journalofukraini232cana Introduction The cluster of four articles on Galicia in this issue of the Journal of Ukrainian Studies has its origin in a conference on “Jews, Poles, and Ukrainians in Galicia: 1772-1918” sponsored by the Institut fiir die Wissenschaften vom Menschen and held in Vienna on 26-28 June 1992. However, none of them were actually presented as papers at that conference. As one of the conference’s four “project co-ordinators,” I was charged with assembling articles to fill out the projected volume of conference papers. I had heard Jolanta Pgkacz’s paper at the University of Alberta and was impressed by her conceptualization of the “cultural public” of Galicia. It was a fresh approach, partly inspired by her explorations of French socio-cultural history, and I asked for it for the conference volume. I had directed Mark Baker’s M.A. thesis, which had a chapter on Lewis Namier and the problem of Eastern Galicia after World War I. Thematically it filled a major gap in the volume, since the war and its aftermath were absent from other contributions. Mark’s contribution fit the volume profile particularly well because the relations among Ukrainians, Poles, and Jews in Galicia figured so prominently in it. After completing his M.A. thesis, Mark moved on to Harvard and is working there on a Ph.D. dissertation on the Ukrainian revolution. In fact, he was doing archival research in Ukraine when he thoroughly revised his original text for inclusion in the volume. Feodosii Steblii, the dean of Galician historians in Ukraine, had participated in the Vienna conference, but had delivered a different paper than the one he eventually submitted for publication. I had been charged with acquiring his final Ukrainian text and seeing that it was translated into English. After accepting these three contributions for publication in the conference volume, I was informed that it was not going to be published as such; instead, most of the conference presentations, supplemented with additional articles on the history of Galician Jews, were to appear in a special issue of Polin, a journal devoted to Polish-Jewish relations. Consequently I had three excellent articles on Galicia that I was free to publish elsewhere, and I submitted them to the Journal of Ukrainian Studies. Encouraged by Roman Senkus, the Journal’s editor, I supplemented these original texts with a piece of my own that I thought made some interesting points on the formation and transformation of social strata; it had been published 2 previously, but only in Italian, in Quaderni storici 28, no. 3 (December 1993): 657-78. The particularities of Galicia remain important today. It is hoped that this cluster of articles will stimulate additional reflection and research on this aspect of the Ukrainian legacy. John-Paul Himka Journal of Ukrainian Studies 23, no. 2 (Winter 1998) The Transformation and Formation of Social Strata and Their Place in the Ukrainian National Movement in Nineteenth- Century Galicia John-Paul Himka Resting like an epaulet on the shoulder of the Carpathians, the Austrian crownland of Galicia affords rich material for the study of nationality in nineteenth-century east-central Europe. It was home to three peoples who might be regarded as archetypical representatives of the east-central European nations. Clustered more in the western part of the province, around Cracow, were the Poles, who retained a traditional elite—the gentry (szlachta )—and a strong tradition of statehood from the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. They thus constituted a “historical nation” like the Hungarians; they owned the large estates throughout the crownland,

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