Between 1933 and 1945, some fourteen million civilians were killed by the Nazi and Soviet regimes as matter of deliberate policy in the lands between Berlin and Moscow. Although we may know something about individual policies of terror, we have failed to grasp the scale of the killing, and to realize its geographical specificity. In a New York Times review of Timothy Snyder\u27s recent publication, Bloodlands, the book that forms the basis of this lecture, Joshua Rubenstein, writes that it was in German-controlled Soviet territory that the Nazis carried out the full logic of their murderous intentions. Within a half-year, the Wehrmacht succeeded in occupying all of Ukraine, Belarus and the Baltic States. And it was here, with the murder fir...
grantor: University of TorontoThis is the first detailed study of the impact of Nazi rule ...
Ethnic groups, offenders and victims The propagandist portrayals of the past, present in the discou...
Gavriel Rosenfeld is a contributing author, The Normalization of Memory: Saul Friedländer’s Refle...
Bloodlands or a Bloody Nose to History? Timothy Snyder’s Bloodlands Long ago, the study of the Sovie...
This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence...
Timothy Snyder is a leading light among scholars engaged in the study of 20th century central and ea...
International audienceSince the publication of Bloodlands in 2010 and Black Earth in 2015, the Ameri...
Timothy Snyder’s "Bloodlands". Critical comments on the construction of historical landscape Jürgen...
Straipsnis yra Timothy Snyder studijos „Bloodlands. Europe between Hitler and Stalin“ (New York: Bas...
Vasily Grossman and Ilya Ehrenburg were both significantly influential writers in the Soviet Union d...
After the German army in 1943 discovered the graves of murdered Polish army officers in the Katyn Fo...
American Sovietology was formed in the years of the “Cold War” as science, which methodologically a...
Der vom Zentrum Liberale Moderne veröffentlichte Sammelband Ukraine Verstehen. Auf den Spuren von Te...
This dissertation examines what one Volhynian writer called a "sea of blood and tears" - the three-y...
Global theses with local omissions Timothy Snyder’s book is an ambitious monograph which attempts a...
grantor: University of TorontoThis is the first detailed study of the impact of Nazi rule ...
Ethnic groups, offenders and victims The propagandist portrayals of the past, present in the discou...
Gavriel Rosenfeld is a contributing author, The Normalization of Memory: Saul Friedländer’s Refle...
Bloodlands or a Bloody Nose to History? Timothy Snyder’s Bloodlands Long ago, the study of the Sovie...
This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence...
Timothy Snyder is a leading light among scholars engaged in the study of 20th century central and ea...
International audienceSince the publication of Bloodlands in 2010 and Black Earth in 2015, the Ameri...
Timothy Snyder’s "Bloodlands". Critical comments on the construction of historical landscape Jürgen...
Straipsnis yra Timothy Snyder studijos „Bloodlands. Europe between Hitler and Stalin“ (New York: Bas...
Vasily Grossman and Ilya Ehrenburg were both significantly influential writers in the Soviet Union d...
After the German army in 1943 discovered the graves of murdered Polish army officers in the Katyn Fo...
American Sovietology was formed in the years of the “Cold War” as science, which methodologically a...
Der vom Zentrum Liberale Moderne veröffentlichte Sammelband Ukraine Verstehen. Auf den Spuren von Te...
This dissertation examines what one Volhynian writer called a "sea of blood and tears" - the three-y...
Global theses with local omissions Timothy Snyder’s book is an ambitious monograph which attempts a...
grantor: University of TorontoThis is the first detailed study of the impact of Nazi rule ...
Ethnic groups, offenders and victims The propagandist portrayals of the past, present in the discou...
Gavriel Rosenfeld is a contributing author, The Normalization of Memory: Saul Friedländer’s Refle...