Results 11 to 20 of about 145 (73)
The article investigates changing attitudes to memory politics in Ukrainian city of Kharkiv. In February 2022, with the outbreak of the full-scale Russo-Ukrainian war, this geopolitical fault-line city became a frontline city with significant potential ...
Oleksiy Gnatiuk, Mykola Homanyuk
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Public inertia towards the new toponymic landscapes in Vinnytsia, Ukraine [PDF]
The paper focuses on the practices of everyday use of street names after the massive toponymic cleansing under the frameworks of decommunisation and de-Russification in Vinnytsia, Ukraine.
Oleksiy Gnatiuk +3 more
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In 2015, as a result of implementing the Ukrainian decommunisation laws, the official name of the Museum of the Great Patriotic War was changed to the National Museum of the History of Ukraine in the Second World War. The current exhibition at the museum
Olga Gontarska
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COMMUNIZATION AND DE-COMMUNIZATION OF TOPONYMS IN KAMYANETS’-PODIL’S’KY
The Communisation about change on toponymy map in Kamyanets’-Podil’s’ky during the 1920s – early ХХІ century. Within the first 20 years of Soviet rule, most microtoponyms that did not fit into the ideological system of the Communist Party were renamed –
Ihor Starenkyi, Yaryna Zaishliuk
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After the Bronze night: 9 May in contemporary Estonia
The article deals with the transformation of the interpretation of 9 May in Estonia after the Bronze Night in Tallinn (2007) which was marked by sizeable clashes between Russian-speaking and Estonian youth.
Anastasya V. Volodina
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Between Lenin and Bandera: Decommunization and Multivocality in (post)Euromaidan Ukraine
Per Anders Rudling, Wallenberg Academy Fellow at Lund University, reviews Between Lenin and Bandera: Decommunisation and Multivocality in (post)Euromaidan Ukraine written by Anna Kutina.
Per Anders Rudling
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The Cultural Space of the City on the Frontier: Kharkiv during Decommunization and the War
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Roman Liubavskyi, Yevhen Zaharchenko
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DECOMMUNISATION AS A TOOL FOR PROMOTING NATIONALIST IDEAS IN UKRAINE
Maksim Vadimovich Kulaga +1 more
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Overview: Paweł Śpiewak. 2005. Pamięć po komunizmie [Memory of Communism]. Gdańsk: słowo/obraz terytoria. 270 pp. ISBN 8374536004.
Cecylia Kuta
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For almost eight months - from November 2015 to July 2016 - the most significant number of settlements in Ukraine since independence got new names. The names were changed following the Law of Ukraine “On Condemnation of Communist and National Socialist (
Bohdan Korolenko +2 more
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