Description

Book Synopsis

This volume presents the first comprehensive scholarly analysis of the collective memory of the Holodomorâthe Ukrainian Great Famine of 1932-1933âexamining its construction, evolution, and contestation across nearly a century. Moving beyond historical accounts of the event itself, this book interrogates how memories of this catastrophe have been shaped, mobilized, and interpreted within multiple discursive frameworks.

Drawing on interdisciplinary methodological approaches from memory studies and political science, the author provides a rigorous examination of how the Holodomor has been constructed as social-cultural memory by actors who challenged Soviet policies of enforced amnesia. The book illuminates the complex interrelationship between memory agents, political institutions, and commemorative practices, while critically assessing the securitization of memory and its implications for academic discourse.

This theoretically nuanced contribution to memory studies and Eastern European historiography will be indispensable for researchers and postgraduate students engaged with genocide studies, collective memory, post-Soviet politics, and the intersection of historical narrative and national identity formation.

The Holodomor in Politics Memory and History

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    A Hardback by Georgiy Kasianov

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      Publisher: Taylor & Francis
      Publication Date: 17/11/2025
      ISBN13: 9781041135029, 978-1041135029
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This volume presents the first comprehensive scholarly analysis of the collective memory of the Holodomorâthe Ukrainian Great Famine of 1932-1933âexamining its construction, evolution, and contestation across nearly a century. Moving beyond historical accounts of the event itself, this book interrogates how memories of this catastrophe have been shaped, mobilized, and interpreted within multiple discursive frameworks.

      Drawing on interdisciplinary methodological approaches from memory studies and political science, the author provides a rigorous examination of how the Holodomor has been constructed as social-cultural memory by actors who challenged Soviet policies of enforced amnesia. The book illuminates the complex interrelationship between memory agents, political institutions, and commemorative practices, while critically assessing the securitization of memory and its implications for academic discourse.

      This theoretically nuanced contribution to memory studies and Eastern European historiography will be indispensable for researchers and postgraduate students engaged with genocide studies, collective memory, post-Soviet politics, and the intersection of historical narrative and national identity formation.

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