This volume provides the English-speaking reader with little-known perspectives of Central and Eastern European historians on the topic of the Russian Revolution. Whereas research into the Soviet Union's history has flourished at Western universities, the contribution of Central and Eastern European historians, during the Cold War working in conditions of imposed censorship, to this field of academic research has often been seriously circumscribed. Bringing together perspectives from across Central and Eastern Europe alongside contributions from established scholars from the West, this significant volume casts the year 1917 in a new critical light.…mehr
This volume provides the English-speaking reader with little-known perspectives of Central and Eastern European historians on the topic of the Russian Revolution. Whereas research into the Soviet Union's history has flourished at Western universities, the contribution of Central and Eastern European historians, during the Cold War working in conditions of imposed censorship, to this field of academic research has often been seriously circumscribed. Bringing together perspectives from across Central and Eastern Europe alongside contributions from established scholars from the West, this significant volume casts the year 1917 in a new critical light.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
¿ukasz Adamski is a historian (PhD) and foreign policy expert, and also an author/editor of academic works devoted to Polish political thought, the history of Polish-Ukrainian and Polish-Russian relations. He is currently deputy director of the Centre for Polish-Russian Dialogue and Understanding since 2016 (a public institution, established by an act of the Polish parliament). Bart¿omiej Gajos is a historian, research fellow at the Centre for Polish-Russian Dialogue and Understanding and at the Institute of History (Polish Academy of Sciences). He specializes in the history of the Russian revolution and politics of memory.
Inhaltsangabe
List of Contributors 1. Introduction by ukasz Adamski, Bart omiej Gajos 2. "A ravaged century": Did the Russian revolution define the 1900s? by Marek Kornat 3. Violence in the Russian Revolution and Civil War, 1914-2: A Survey of Recent Historiography by Steve S. Smith 4. From utopia to a lawless state: Russian Marxism and Russian revolutions as a totalitarian project by Adam Bosiacki 5. Loci of political power: The 1917 Russian Revolution from regional perspectives by Sarah Badcock 6. The Karaim: Political and social activities during the Russian revolution and civil war by Petr Kaleta 7. The 1917 Russian Revolution and Belarusian National Movement by Alaksandar Smaliäczuk 8. Great Britain and the 1917 revolution in Ukraine by Jan Jacek Bruski 9. "Finexit" - The Russian Revolution and Finnish Independence by Kari Alenius 10. Rebellion: Social conflict in Central and Eastern Europe in 1917-1920 by W odzimierz Borodziej, Maciej Górny 11. Poland and the influence of the Revolution on the French and Western Political and Military Circles (1917-1921) by Frederic Dessberg 12. The Consequences of the Russian Revolution on the Polish Question from the Western Point of View by Isabelle Davion 13. Austria-Hungary and the Russian Revolution by Lothar Höbelt 14. Great Britain and the Russian Revolution of 1917 by Jewgienij Siergiejew 15. Idle memory? The 1917 Anniversary in Russia by Boris Ko onicki, Maria Mackiewicz 16. A quiet jubilee: Practices of the Political Commemoration of the Centenary of the 1917 Revolution(s) in Russia by Olga Malinowa 17. (R)evolutionary memory in Tambov (1991-2017) by Bart omiej Gajos Index
List of Contributors 1. Introduction by ukasz Adamski, Bart omiej Gajos 2. "A ravaged century": Did the Russian revolution define the 1900s? by Marek Kornat 3. Violence in the Russian Revolution and Civil War, 1914-2: A Survey of Recent Historiography by Steve S. Smith 4. From utopia to a lawless state: Russian Marxism and Russian revolutions as a totalitarian project by Adam Bosiacki 5. Loci of political power: The 1917 Russian Revolution from regional perspectives by Sarah Badcock 6. The Karaim: Political and social activities during the Russian revolution and civil war by Petr Kaleta 7. The 1917 Russian Revolution and Belarusian National Movement by Alaksandar Smaliäczuk 8. Great Britain and the 1917 revolution in Ukraine by Jan Jacek Bruski 9. "Finexit" - The Russian Revolution and Finnish Independence by Kari Alenius 10. Rebellion: Social conflict in Central and Eastern Europe in 1917-1920 by W odzimierz Borodziej, Maciej Górny 11. Poland and the influence of the Revolution on the French and Western Political and Military Circles (1917-1921) by Frederic Dessberg 12. The Consequences of the Russian Revolution on the Polish Question from the Western Point of View by Isabelle Davion 13. Austria-Hungary and the Russian Revolution by Lothar Höbelt 14. Great Britain and the Russian Revolution of 1917 by Jewgienij Siergiejew 15. Idle memory? The 1917 Anniversary in Russia by Boris Ko onicki, Maria Mackiewicz 16. A quiet jubilee: Practices of the Political Commemoration of the Centenary of the 1917 Revolution(s) in Russia by Olga Malinowa 17. (R)evolutionary memory in Tambov (1991-2017) by Bart omiej Gajos Index
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