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