1,721,044 research outputs found
Le lingue degli oligarchi: come si è costruito un conflitto nazionale nell’Ucraina post-sovietica
Review of Solomiia Diakiv, compiler and editor. Stefaniia Shabatura: Vybrana palitra kol'oriv z mozaiky zhyttia i tvorchosti
Osvita v Ukraïni pid chas natsysts’koï okupatsiï (na materialakh Dnipropetrovs’koï oblasti)
DISSENSO E PROTESTE NELLA DIASPORA UCRAINA IN AMERICA SETTENTRIONALE DOPO IL 1968
Questo articolo presenta la storia di due organizzazioni studentesche ucraine negli Stati Uniti, la New York Ukrainian Students Hromada (Comunità) e il Comitato per la difesa dei prigionieri politici sovietici. Nati tra la fine degli anni '60 e l'inizio degli anni '70, questi due gruppi rivelano la diversa concezione dell'appartenenza nazionale della seconda generazione della terza ondata migratoria ucraina in America. L'azione di questi gruppi ha avuto una forte dimensione transnazionale, in grado di attrarre gruppi di giovani ucraini anche in altri paesi e rivela l'influenza che i dissidenti nell'Ucraina sovietica hanno avuto sullo sviluppo del movimento per la difesa dei diritti umani all'Ovest
Взяти інтерв’ю у „легенди”: Ліна Костенко та колективна пам’ять шістдесятництва
Interviewing a legend: Lina Kostenko and the collective memory of the shistdesiantytstvo. A feeling of discomfort and disappointment towards the collective memory of the shistdesiatnytstvo in Ukraine emerged during the interview with Lina Kostenko, as well as with other shistdesiatnyky. The public dis- course, including many scholarly studies on the topic, usually ignores the ethic and “affective” com- ponents which were so important to the members of this movement, whose behavior and universe of values radically differed from the Stalinist Soviet respectability. The function of the shistdesiatnytstvo as the detonator of a positive nationalism is thus neglected. Some important stages in the formation of Lina Kostenko’s personality are then analyzed: the family upbringing based on the love for Ukrainian and worldwide culture, the traumas of childhood during World War II, the importance of building friendly bonds with other shistdesiatnyky, especially with Vasyl’ Symonenko
Osvita v Ukraïni pid chas natsysts’koï okupatsiï (na materialakh Dnipropetrovs’koï oblasti)
Making Soviet Ukraine Ukrainian: The Debate on Ukrainian Statehood in the Journal Suchasnist’ (1961–1971)
This article analyzes the debate on Ukrainian statehood going on in the 1960s in Suchasnist’, the most intellectually prestigious journal among Ukrainian emigrants in the West. These intellectuals and political activists interpreted the renaissance of Ukrainian national culture in the 1960s (the so-called shistdesiatnytstvo) in various ways and proposed different political strategies to influence their original homeland and its future political and cultural developments. In the Ukrainian diaspora, two opposing factions emerged: the first, despite condemning Soviet imperialism, favorably evaluated the birth of a movement for the defense of human rights in Soviet Ukraine and was happy to exploit the rapprochement between the USSR and USA to finally have an opportunity to make contact with the motherland. The other did not consider the Ukrainian SSR as a real example of a Ukrainian state and acknowledged its existence only for tactical reasons; this faction thought that contact should be avoided and that the Soviets should be offered no opportunity to address the Western public. Eventually, at the beginning of the 1970s, even those who had opposed collaboration with any subject from Soviet Ukraine decided to embrace the cause of human rights and join the struggle led by the Ukrainian dissent
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