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Contents

Acknowledgments ix

Abbreviations xiii

INTRODUCTION Ç

Empire and Its Nations 3

Communities of Memory 6

Stalin’s Ukrainians 9

1 SOVIET NATIONAL PATRIOTS 13

Between Class and Nation 15

Remembering the Nation 19

The Great Ukrainian People 24

2 THE UNBREAKABLE UNION 33

The Unifying Past 34

Ranking Friends and Brothers 39

Ukraine Reunited 47

3 REINVENTING IDEOLOGICAL ORTHODOXY 53

Confusing Signals from Above 54

The Ukrainian AhdanovJichina 62

Fashioning an Acceptable Paet 66

4 THE UNFINISHED CRUSADE OF 1947 72

The Enforced Dialogue 73

The Attack on Historians 77

The Campaign’s Nationalist Echoes 84

5 WRITING A ‘STALINIST HISTORY OF UKRAINE’ 88

The Quest for a New Memory 89

Defining the Ancient Past 93

Remembering the Empire 96

Narrating the Nation 102

6 DEFINING THE NATIONAL HERITAGE 108

The Ukrainian Classics 109

In the House of History 114

Sites of Remembrance 120

7 EMPIRE AND NATION IN THE ARTISTIC IMAGINATION 129

Writers’ Licence 130

Filmmakers and Artists Imagine the Past 137

History at the Opera 145

EPILOGUE 153

The Last Stalinist Festival 154

After Stalin 159

Notes 163

Bibliography 199

Index 217

Illustrations follow p.

xiv

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Source: Yekelchuk S.. Stalin's Empire of Memory: Russian-Ukrainian Relations in the Soviet Historical Imagination. Toronto: University of Toronto Press,2014. — 252 p.. 2014

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