This essays describes two sites of memory of post-Soviet Ukraine: the memorials of World War Two and of the Holodomor on the Pechersk Hills in Kyiv. The analysis is introduced into the context of Soviet and later post-Soviet monument building and stresses the continuity and discontinuities in the public efforts of the Ukrainian governments to draw the attention of both national and international public opinion to a particular version of history, supporting the specific political power in Ukraine. The author stresses the importance of certain modules of communication in these monumental memorials that are taken from other memorials all around the world. Eventually the author underlines the importance of memory policies for younger nation-sta...
In 2015, as a result of implementing the Ukrainian decommunisation laws, the official name of the Mu...
This article contains the findings of a study of the narrative of the National Museum of the History...
The article focuses on (re)constructing the local memorial landscape in a post-Soviet military base ...
This essays describes two sites of memory of post-Soviet Ukraine: the memorials of World War Two and...
This essay illustrates the development of the politics of memory in post-Soviet Ukraine through an a...
There are two main models of memory in Ukraine: nationalist and post-Soviet. After 1991, Ukrainian h...
This paper concerns the role of genocide in collective memory and its function for national identity...
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Ukrainian society faced a new reality. The new reality invol...
The aim of this text is to present the internal differentiation of Ukrainian social memory. The auth...
The post-Soviet Ukrainian polity has invested considerableresources into forming and managing what i...
In this research project, I examine Ukraine’s struggle to develop a shared national identity after t...
In Ukraine, heritage has been a battlefield since World War II. In those years, the Kyiv reconstruct...
Recently in the West, interest in the memory of the Holocaust considered as a commonly shared dark p...
Despite more than 20 years of independence, Ukraine’s former political system has not vanished, as i...
This article proposes to look afresh at the legacies of communism in urban spaces in post-1989 Polan...
In 2015, as a result of implementing the Ukrainian decommunisation laws, the official name of the Mu...
This article contains the findings of a study of the narrative of the National Museum of the History...
The article focuses on (re)constructing the local memorial landscape in a post-Soviet military base ...
This essays describes two sites of memory of post-Soviet Ukraine: the memorials of World War Two and...
This essay illustrates the development of the politics of memory in post-Soviet Ukraine through an a...
There are two main models of memory in Ukraine: nationalist and post-Soviet. After 1991, Ukrainian h...
This paper concerns the role of genocide in collective memory and its function for national identity...
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Ukrainian society faced a new reality. The new reality invol...
The aim of this text is to present the internal differentiation of Ukrainian social memory. The auth...
The post-Soviet Ukrainian polity has invested considerableresources into forming and managing what i...
In this research project, I examine Ukraine’s struggle to develop a shared national identity after t...
In Ukraine, heritage has been a battlefield since World War II. In those years, the Kyiv reconstruct...
Recently in the West, interest in the memory of the Holocaust considered as a commonly shared dark p...
Despite more than 20 years of independence, Ukraine’s former political system has not vanished, as i...
This article proposes to look afresh at the legacies of communism in urban spaces in post-1989 Polan...
In 2015, as a result of implementing the Ukrainian decommunisation laws, the official name of the Mu...
This article contains the findings of a study of the narrative of the National Museum of the History...
The article focuses on (re)constructing the local memorial landscape in a post-Soviet military base ...