Journal ToC. Harvard Ukrainian Studies. Volume 38 (Number 1–2), 2021

Iryna Skubii Discussion

Harvard Ukrainian Studies. The Journal of the Ukrainian Research Institute at Harvard University

Volume 38 (Number 1–2), 2021

  • “No German Must Starve”: The Germans and the Soviet Famines of 1931–1933

    Paolo Fonzi

    Available Online

    Page 13 - 44

  • Leninfall in Ukraine: How Did the Lenin Statues Disappear?

    Oleksandra Gaidai

    Page 45 - 70

  • Mykhailo Hrushevs´kyi and the Construction of the Medieval History of Rus´

    Christian Raffensperger

    Page 71 - 86

  • Old Models for New Princes: Biblical Kingship in Kyivan Rus´

    Susana Torres Prieto

    Page 87 - 106

  • Four Decades of Modernist Revolution: Creating a New Subjectivity in Ukrainian Poetry, 1900–1940

    Alessandro Achilli

    Page 107 - 134

  • BOOK REVIEWS

    Mara Kozelsky, Crimea in War and Transformation

    Edward J. Lazzerini

    Page 135 - 137

  • Stephen Velychenko, Propaganda in Revolutionary Ukraine: Leaflets, Pamphlets, and Cartoons, 1917–1922

    Serhy Yekelchyk

    Page 138 - 140

  • Ivan Maistrenko, Borot´bism: A Chapter in the History of the Ukrainian Revolution

    Stephen Velychenko

    Page 141 - 144

  • Ray Gamache, Gareth Jones: Eyewitness to the Holodomor

    John Vsetecka

    Page 145 - 147

  • Anna Wylegała and Małgorzata Głowacka-Grajper, eds., The Burden of the Past: History, Memory, and Identity in Contemporary Ukraine

    Francesco Trupia

    Page 148 - 150

  • Li Bennich-Björkman and Sergiy Kurbatov, eds., When the Future Came: The Collapse of the USSR and the Emergence of National Memory in Post-Soviet History Textbooks

    Martin J. Blackwell

    Page 151 - 152

  • Mikhail Minakov, Development and Dystopia: Studies in Post-Soviet Ukraine and Eastern Europe

    Ihor Andriichuk

    Page 153 - 155

  • Corinne A. Seals, Choosing a Mother Tongue: The Politics of Language and Identity in Ukraine

    Volodymyr Kulyk

    Page 156 - 157

  • Oleksandra Wallo, Ukrainian Women Writers and the National Imaginary: From the Collapse of the USSR to the Euromaidan

    Grace Mahoney

    Page 158 - 161

For more details, see: https://www.husj.harvard.edu/volumes/volume-38-number-1-2-2021?fbclid=IwAR04_YeprpnzPjETKuXfIn7axL96c4hvAtMjFlGS_LBtVWB3cIpA9w5an_k