TOC: Ab Imperio 2-2004 Memory Repressed, Silenced, and Lost

glebov at RCI.RUTGERS.EDU glebov at RCI.RUTGERS.EDU
Wed Sep 15 14:56:43 UTC 2004


Dear friends and colleagues,
Ab Imperio editors would like to repeat the announcement of the release of
the second issue of the journal in 2004. Ab Imperio is a bilingual
(English-Russian) quarterly dedicated to studies of New Imperial History
and Nationalism in the post Soviet Space. The second issue of the journal
focuses on the theme "Memory Repressed, Silenced, and Lost" which is
conceived within the framework of the overall annual theme "The Archeology
of Memory of Empire and Nation." This issue also features a separate forum
dedicated to the discussion of Cossack history, identity, and history
writing in the imperial, national and post soviet space.

This issue of the journal may be accessed online at: http://www.abimperio.net
Subscription and purchase options are listed at:
http://www.abimperio.net/order

For any inquires, please, contact the editors at: office at abimperio.net,
semyonov at abimperio.net, glebov at rci.rutgers.edu ,
akaplunovski at abimperio.net


(The language of publication is indicated in brackets)

Ab Imperio Issue 2, 2004

“MEMORY REPRESSED, SILENCED, AND LOST”

I. METHODOLOGY AND THEORY

>From the Editors (RUS/ENG)

Boris Groys
The Role of Museum at the Time of the Nation-State Disintegration (RUS)

Alexander Etkind
Time to Compare Stones. Post-Revolutionary Culture of Political Sorrow in
Contemporary Russia (RUS)

Serhy Yekelchyk
Ukrainian Historical Memory and the Soviet Commemorative Canon: Defining
Ukrainian National Heritage under Stalin (RUS)

Antony Polonsky
Poles, Jews and the Problems of a Divided Memory (ENG)


II. HISTORY

Ekaterina Boltunova
The Russian Guards in the First Quarter of the 18th Century:
“Antitraditionalists” or “Traditionalist Reformers” (RUS)

Elena Vishlenkova
A Lost Version of War and Peace: Symbolism of Alexander I’s Era (RUS)

Igor Narskii
The Construction of the Civil War Myth and the Peculiarities of the
Collective Amnesia in the Urals, 1917-1922 (RUS)

Bert Hoppe
Fighting the Enemy’s Past: Konigsberg/Kaliningrad as a Place of Memory in
the Post-War USSR (RUS)

Sergei Digol
The 1949 Operation “South” in the Left-Bank Moldavia: A Forgotten Fragment
of “Rehabilitated” Memory (RUS)

Alexander Osipian
Ethnic Cleansings and Memory Purges: The Ukrainian-Polish Borderland in
1937-1947 in Moder

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