Oh, That! Myth, Memory, and World War I in the Russian Emigration and the Soviet Union

Historians of Russia have not analyzed the roles that the memory of World War I played in Russian life, and Russia remains largely absent from comparative studies of the war and its legacy. Russian people did have "sites of memory" where they expressed myths, displayed symbols, and mobiliz...

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Slavic Review. - Association for Slavic East European and Eurasian Studies. - 62(2003), 1, Seite 69-86
1. Verfasser: Cohen, Aaron J. (VerfasserIn)
Format: Online-Aufsatz
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: 2003
Zugriff auf das übergeordnete Werk:Slavic Review
Schlagworte:Political science Behavioral sciences Social sciences
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Historians of Russia have not analyzed the roles that the memory of World War I played in Russian life, and Russia remains largely absent from comparative studies of the war and its legacy. Russian people did have "sites of memory" where they expressed myths, displayed symbols, and mobilized public opinion around the memory of World War I. Outside the Soviet Union, a non-Soviet Russian memory of the Great War flourished in the interwar years, and the war became an important memory that military émigrés used to overcome the rupture from the past (imperial Russia) and the present (Russian territory) caused by revolution and life in emigration. The war had a different expression in Soviet Russia, where journalists and publicists evoked its image, but not its historical content, to break the USSR from the Russian past and separate the first socialist society from its enemies in the present.
ISSN:00376779
DOI:10.2307/3090467