Memory of the Second World War in Soviet and Post-Soviet Russia

Memory of the Second World War in Soviet and Post-Soviet Russia

Hoffmann, David L.

Taylor & Francis Ltd

08/2021

370

Dura

Inglês

9780367701765

15 a 20 dias

671

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Introduction: The Politics of Commemoration in the Soviet Union and Contemporary Russia Part I: Soviet Remembrance of the War 1. Wartime Mobilizational Strategies and the Origins of Soviet War Memory 2. Situating Stalin in the History of the Second World War 3. Victory Day before the Cult: War Commemoration in the USSR, 1945-1965 4. Teaching and Remembering the Great Patriotic War in Soviet Schools 5. Representations of Gender in Soviet War Memorials Part II: Soviet and Post-Soviet War Memory 6. Veterans Remember the War in Soviet and Post-Soviet Fiction 7. Lend-Lease in War and Russian Memory 8. Politicizing War Memorialization in Soviet and Post-Soviet Sevastopol 9. World War II Memories and Local Media in the Russian North: Velikii Novgorod and Murmansk 10. Parades in Russian Memory Culture Part III: Representations of the War in the Putin Era 11. Performing Memory and Its Limits: Vladimir Putin and the Celebration of World War II in Russia 12. Holocaust Discourse in Putin's Russia as a Foreign Policy Tool 13. The War Film and Memory Politics in Putin's Russia 14. Jews, Gender, and Just Wars: Remembering and Rewriting the Great Patriotic War in 2015 War Films 15. The 21st-Century Memory of the Great Patriotic War in the "Russia-My History" Museum
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Great Patriotic War;Pierre Nora;Victory Day;Sites of Memory;Young Men;Nazi Invaders;World War II;War Memory;Rodina Mat;War Memorialization;Stalingrad;Russian Orthodox Church;Battle of Kursk;Red Army;Mother Russia;World War Ii Memory;Siege of Leningrad;Babi Yar;Crimean Secession;Soviet War Effort;Russian Spring;Velikii Novgorod;Holodomor;Red Army Soldier;Defeat of Fascism;commemoration;Fascist Invaders;Holocaust remembrance;West Germany;memorialization;Young Guard;war monuments;Putin Regime;Victory Day Celebrations;Soviet Union;Stalin's Role;Bulat Okudzhava;Hero Cities;Commemorative Culture;Eternal Flame