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Historical narratives in the Soviet ...
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Palgrave Connect (Online service)
Historical narratives in the Soviet Union and post-Soviet Russia[electronic resource] :destroying the settled past, creating an uncertain future /
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
[NT 15000414]:
947.084
Title/Author:
Historical narratives in the Soviet Union and post-Soviet Russia : destroying the settled past, creating an uncertain future // Thomas Sherlock.
Author:
Sherlock, Thomas D.
Published:
New York : : Palgrave Macmillan,, 2007.
Description:
viii, 271 p.
Subject:
Soviet Union - Pictorial works. - History - 1925-1953
ISBN:
9780230604216
ISBN:
0230604218
[NT 15000227]:
Includes bibliographical references (p. [241]-262) and index.
[NT 15000228]:
Myth and History in Transitions From Nondemocratic Rule -- Authorizing Reform By Uncovering the Past -- Leninist Mythology and Reform -- Assessing the Genesis of Stalinism -- Societal Conquest and the Decay of the Center -- Myth, History, and Separatism in the Periphery -- Historyand Myth in the Post-Soviet Space.
[NT 15000229]:
This book investigates the significance of historical narratives in Soviet and post-Soviet space. Encompassing reform under Mikhail Gorbachev and retrenchment under Vladimir Putin, it explains the political, social, and cultural importance of a polity?s myths. Charting the rise ofanti-Soviet and anti-communist narratives under perestroika, and theireventual marginalization in post-Soviet Russia, the book argues that changes in symbolic politics must be examined within cultural, socio-political, and international contexts. Of particular relevance is the interactive relationship between state and society. The study of historicaldiscourse must focus not only on how and why the state imposes its discursive preferences on society, thereby shaping public memory, but alsoon why and how thestate itself is constructed by prevailing narratives in society.
Online resource:
access to fulltext (Palgrave)
Historical narratives in the Soviet Union and post-Soviet Russia[electronic resource] :destroying the settled past, creating an uncertain future /
Sherlock, Thomas D.
Historical narratives in the Soviet Union and post-Soviet Russia
destroying the settled past, creating an uncertain future /[electronic resource] :Thomas Sherlock. - 1st ed. - New York :Palgrave Macmillan,2007. - viii, 271 p.
Includes bibliographical references (p. [241]-262) and index.
Myth and History in Transitions From Nondemocratic Rule -- Authorizing Reform By Uncovering the Past -- Leninist Mythology and Reform -- Assessing the Genesis of Stalinism -- Societal Conquest and the Decay of the Center -- Myth, History, and Separatism in the Periphery -- Historyand Myth in the Post-Soviet Space.
This book investigates the significance of historical narratives in Soviet and post-Soviet space. Encompassing reform under Mikhail Gorbachev and retrenchment under Vladimir Putin, it explains the political, social, and cultural importance of a polity?s myths. Charting the rise ofanti-Soviet and anti-communist narratives under perestroika, and theireventual marginalization in post-Soviet Russia, the book argues that changes in symbolic politics must be examined within cultural, socio-political, and international contexts. Of particular relevance is the interactive relationship between state and society. The study of historicaldiscourse must focus not only on how and why the state imposes its discursive preferences on society, thereby shaping public memory, but alsoon why and how thestate itself is constructed by prevailing narratives in society.
Electronic reproduction.
Basingstoke, England :
Palgrave Macmillan,
2009.
Mode of access:World Wide Web.
ISBN: 9780230604216
Standard No.: 10.1057/9780230604216doiSubjects--Geographical Terms:
366829
Soviet Union
--History--1925-1953--Pictorial works.Index Terms--Genre/Form:
336502
Electronic books.
LC Class. No.: DK268.4 / .S47 2007eb
Dewey Class. No.: 947.084
Historical narratives in the Soviet Union and post-Soviet Russia[electronic resource] :destroying the settled past, creating an uncertain future /
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destroying the settled past, creating an uncertain future /
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Thomas Sherlock.
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Includes bibliographical references (p. [241]-262) and index.
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Myth and History in Transitions From Nondemocratic Rule -- Authorizing Reform By Uncovering the Past -- Leninist Mythology and Reform -- Assessing the Genesis of Stalinism -- Societal Conquest and the Decay of the Center -- Myth, History, and Separatism in the Periphery -- Historyand Myth in the Post-Soviet Space.
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This book investigates the significance of historical narratives in Soviet and post-Soviet space. Encompassing reform under Mikhail Gorbachev and retrenchment under Vladimir Putin, it explains the political, social, and cultural importance of a polity?s myths. Charting the rise ofanti-Soviet and anti-communist narratives under perestroika, and theireventual marginalization in post-Soviet Russia, the book argues that changes in symbolic politics must be examined within cultural, socio-political, and international contexts. Of particular relevance is the interactive relationship between state and society. The study of historicaldiscourse must focus not only on how and why the state imposes its discursive preferences on society, thereby shaping public memory, but alsoon why and how thestate itself is constructed by prevailing narratives in society.
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1925-1953
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access to fulltext (Palgrave)
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