Following the 2004-5 Orange Revolution, President Viktor Yushchenko embarked on an ambitious project to rehabilitate the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) and its armed wing, the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA). Following the Euromaidan Revolution and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2014, a more systematic effort was made to affirm these groups as a center of a new historical canonical canon. This endeavor necessitated a highly selective rendering of these organizations’ history, not least in regard to their role in the Holocaust and their systematic massacres of the Polish minority in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia in 1943–44. The attempts to rehabilitate some of the OUN’s most prominent leaders – Mykola Lebed’, Roman Shukhevych, Stepan Bandera, Yaroslav Stets’ko, and others – all faced significant obstacles as newly available archival materials undermined key tenants of the state-sanctioned memory.
The book’s introduction to the intellectual history of Ukrainian nationalism and particular conditions of nation building of a stateless nation is followed by an investigation of post-Soviet memory management. The study engages the contentious issue of the taxonomy of the OUN’s ideology before concluding with a chapter on how Ukraine’s rehabilitation of this organization has been weaponized by the Russian Federation to justify its criminal war of aggression. In this war, Ukrainians defend not only their territory; their stubborn resistance is a defense of a rules-based order, democracy, fundamental human rights, and the right to self-determination. As a by-product of this is, it may also offer a way out of a memory impasse, beyond Bandera and the OUN.
Per Anders Rudling
Per A. Rudling is associate professor of history at Lund University, and, since 2015, visiting senior fellow at the National University of Singapore. His articles have appeared in, among other outlets, Canadian Slavonic Papers, Carl Beck Papers, East European Jewish Affairs, Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Journal of Slavic Military Studies, Journal of Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society, and Nationalities Papers. In 2015, his book The Rise and Fall of Belarusian Nationalism, 1906-1931 (2014) won the Kulczycki Prize of the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies.
Lieferzeit
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Lieferzeit 2-3 Werktage.
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Serie herausgegeben von | Andreas Umland |
Seitenzahl |
478
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Reihe |
Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society
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Sprache |
Englisch
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Format |
210,0 mm x 148,0 mm
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Erscheinungsdatum |
27.05.2024
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Typ |
Paperback
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ISBN
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978-3-8382-0999-9
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Gewicht
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622 g
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“Tarnished Heroes is the most authoritative account to date of the rise, perversion, resurrection, and perils of Ukrainian nationalism. Starting with the origins and ambivalence of the nationalist ideology in nineteenth-century Ukraine, Rudling’s well-documented study exposes the fascist elements that proliferated in the interwar period and shows how leading figures of that era have come to be venerated by large parts of the population since Ukrainian independence. This is a balanced, forthright, and reliable study that will serve scholars for years to come.” - Omer Bartov, Professor of Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Brown University
“Rudling’s book presents a comprehensive study Ukrainian radical nationalism, its main proponents and its distorted historiography. It reveals the fascist and highly compromised past of Yushchenko’s national heroes and the subsequent falsifications to whitewash their past. Using confounding evidence, the book constitutes a brilliant and uncompromising study of the history, politics, and legacy of Ukrainian nationalism. Intelligent, unbiased and scholarly irrefutable.” - Delphine Bechtel, Professor of Yiddish and Central European Studies, Sorbonne University