Special Issue on 1918 and the Ambiguities of “Old-New Europe”
Photo taken by Paul Goode: “Military cadets parading after the ceremonial laying of wreaths at the Memorial to Heroes of War and the Home Front in Perm, Russia. Since coming to power in 2000, Vladimir Putin rebuilt the memory of victory in the Great Patriotic War as a means of unifying the nation. Beyond the well-known military parade in Moscow on Victory Day (May 9th), regional governments organize commemorative displays that bring together the resources and participation of church, state, business, and civil society actors. While the government appeals to patriotism through public displays of readiness to defend the motherland, most Russians are unmoved by official patriotism. By contrast, the more authentic, everyday practices associated with patriotism are apolitical and bound to family and friendship. This picture captures this contrast between official and everyday patriotism in a shared moment of levity between a pair of military cadets during a somber patriotic ritual in the run-up to the Victory Day parade. Photo taken in Perm’, Russia, May, 2016.”
State of the Field
A New Wave of Research on Civilizational Politics
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- 19 January 2021, pp. 597-608
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Special Issue Article
Introduction: 1918 and the Ambiguities of “Old-New Europe”
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- 22 July 2021, pp. 609-613
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‘Compulsory Independence’: Irish Nationalist Images of Empire and Republic after the Birth of Independent German-Austria, 1919–1922
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- 06 November 2020, pp. 614-628
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“Completely Forgotten and Totally Ignored”: Czechoslovak Veterans of the Austro-Hungarian Army and the Transitions of 1918-1919
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- 06 August 2020, pp. 629-645
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End of War or End of State? 1918 in the Public Memories of Post-Communist Croatia and Serbia
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- 25 January 2021, pp. 646-661
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Women’s Organizations and Antisemitism: The First Parliamentary Elections in Independent Poland
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- 28 October 2020, pp. 662-678
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Article
In Search of the Lands of Rus’: The Idea of Ukraine in the Imagination of the Little Russian Movement (1917–1919)
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- 13 October 2020, pp. 679-690
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Historians as Activists: History Writing in Times of War. The Case of Ukraine in 2014–2018
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- 05 October 2020, pp. 691-709
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The Curse of Displacement: Local Narratives of Forced Expulsion and the Appropriation of Abandoned Property in Abkhazia
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- 15 June 2020, pp. 710-727
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Third Rome or Potemkin village: Analyzing the Extent of Russia’s Power in Serbia, 2012–2019
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- 13 October 2020, pp. 728-737
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Unraveling the Black Mountain: Authoritarian Submission and Party Preference in Montenegro
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- 20 October 2020, pp. 738-756
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Russian Strategic Narratives on R2P in the ‘Near Abroad’
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- 25 August 2020, pp. 757-775
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The Debate about Soviet Genocide in Lithuania in the Case Law of The European Court of Human Rights
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- 27 November 2020, pp. 776-791
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Film Review
Welcome to Chechnya, directed by David France and produced by Alice Henty, David France, Askold Kurov, and Joy A. Tomchin, 2020, 107 minutes. Russian and Chechen with English subtitles. Webpage: https://www.hbo.com/documentaries/welcome-to-chechnya.
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- 26 February 2021, pp. 792-794
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Book Review
Empire and Belonging in the Eurasian Borderlands, edited by Krista A. Goff and Lewis H. Siegelbaum, Ithaca and London, Cornell University Press, 2019, viii+266 pages, $51.59 (hardcover), ISBN 1-5017-3613-2.
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- 07 December 2020, pp. 795-796
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Front Cover (OFC, IFC) and matter
NPS volume 49 issue 4 Cover and Front matter
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- 22 July 2021, pp. f1-f4
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Back Cover (OBC, IBC) and matter
NPS volume 49 issue 4 Cover and Back matter
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- 22 July 2021, pp. b1-b4
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