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Gender, Memory, and National Myths: Ol'ga Berggol'ts and the Siege of Leningrad
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 November 2018
Extract
In Russia, the memory of the Second World War has been at once deeply personal and profoundly political. Largely erased from official memory until Stalin's death, the story of the war became, in the 1960s, a key means of legitimizing the Soviet state. The mythic “20 million”—more recent estimates are closer to 30 million war dead—became the heart of a lasting and state-sanctioned collective memory of shared suffering, patriotism, and redemption. As historian Nina Tumarkin has argued, the official “cult” of the war began to crumble in the mid-1980s, and what she calls “raw human memory,” personal stories untainted by the myth created from above, began to emerge. Tumarkin contends that the “winds of glasnost' and perestroika” effectively “ravaged” both the state-sanctioned “myth” and the “shared memory” of the Great Patriotic War. Personal tragedies began to replace the official tale of national triumph.
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- Forum: Gender, Nation, and Memory
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References
Notes
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45. Tumarkin, The Living and the Dead, pp. 134–135. Ignatieff argues that Soviet memorials “perform a ritual of forgetting: they make it possible for some at least to forget that … there was a way to mobilize a country for war which did not require it to be dragged through the horror and dishonor of fratricide and police terror,” “Soviet War Memorials,” p. 160.Google Scholar
46. Levinson sets the date of the visit at the end of 1948. Berggol'ts‘s account mentions the already-completed “Motherland” statue, suggesting a visit in late 1959. She docs not mention the earlier visit. E. Levinson, “Piskarevskii memorial'nyi ansambl’,” Sovetskaia arkhitektura, No. 19, 1970, p. 148.Google Scholar
47. Berggol'ts, “Popytka avtobiografii,” p. 44.Google Scholar
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