1st Edition

Ukraine Contested Nationhood in a European Context

By Ulrich Schmid Copyright 2019
128 Pages
by Routledge

128 Pages
by Routledge

128 Pages
by Routledge

Ukraine: Contested Nationhood in a European Context challenges the common view that Ukraine is a country split between a pro-European West and a pro-Russian East. The volume navigates the complicated cultural history of Ukraine and highlights the importance of regional traditions for an understanding of the current political situation. A key feature is the different politics of memory that... Read more

1. Where Is Ukraine Situated?



2. How Many Ukraines Are There? Seeing the East-West Opposition in Context



3. The Russian Perspective: ‘Little Russia’ in the ‘Russian World’



4. The Cultivation of the Habsburg Myth in Galicia and Bukovina



5. Poland as Friend and Foe: From the Volhynia Massacre to the Polish Initiatives for Ukraine in the EU



6. National Independence and Regional Differences



7. History Wars over the Tragedies of the Soviet Era



8. The Ukraine Crisis: Civil War or Russian Hybrid War?



9. The Ukrainian Economy



10. The European Union as Unwilling Protector of Ukraine



11. The Complicated Relationship with the USA and NATO



12. Quo vadis, Ukraine?



13. List of Historical City Names



14. Bibliography

Biography

Ulrich Schmid is Professor of Russian Studies at the University of St Gallen, Switzerland. His research interests include nationalism, popular culture and media in Eastern Europe. He studied German and Slavic literature at the Universities of Zürich, Heidelberg, and Leningrad. He has held academic positions in Basel, Bern, Bochum, and was a visiting researcher at Harvard University, in Warsaw, and in Oslo. His publications include Regionalism without Regions: Reconceptualizing Ukraine’s Heterogeneity (ed. 2019); De Profundis: On the Failure of the Russian Revolution (ed. 2017); Technologies of the Soul: The Production of Truth in Contemporary Russian Culture (2015); Sword, Eagle and Cross: The Aesthetics of the Nationalist Discourse in Interwar Poland (ed. 2013) and Tolstoi as a Theological Thinker and Critic of the Church (ed. 2013).