The Living And The Dead: The Rise And Fall Of The Cult Of World War Ii In RussiaWorld War II killed some thirty million Soviet citizens and transformed the lives of survivors and their descendants. It was the defining ordeal that shaped the history of the Soviet behemoth in the past half-century. The Living and the Dead weaves together the tangled threads of the war's memory in the Soviet Union and Russia. This moving account of a suffering people's struggle with brutal history shows how state and party authorities stage-managed a national trauma into a heroic exploit that glorified the Communist partywhile systematically concealing the disastrous mistakes and criminal cruelties committed by the Stalinist tyranny. Nina Tumarkin explores the nature and fate of the myth, beginning in 1941, when Germany launched its catastrophic "Operation Barbarossa". She shows how Stalin first memorialized the war as heroic, triumphal, even messianic, but then demoted the myth because it had produced too many popular heroes and stories of personal initiative. The cult reached its apogee under Brezhnev. The second half of the book relates the poignant story of the cult's demise from 1990 onward, serving as a prism to refract the spectrum of popular responses to the breakup of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. To research the book, Tumarkin strolled with veterans in Gorky Park on Victory days, studied with Russian Army officers, and, with her own hands, unearthed the bones of some of the estimated two to three million Soviet soldiers killed in World War II but never properly buried. The author deftly interweaves into her narrative candid autobiographical sketches focusing on her own encounters with death as well as the remembrances of her Russian emigre family. A new model forbringing history to life through personal engagement and interaction, the book also helps us understand the roots of contemporary Russians' preoccupation with their nation's greatness. The Living and the Dead shows us where the Russian colossus has been - and where it may be headed. |
Contents
Introductory Thoughts | 1 |
Valley of Death | 11 |
The Last Hurrah | 28 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
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The Living And The Dead: The Rise And Fall Of The Cult Of World War II In Russia Nina Tumarkin No preview available - 1995 |
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Adamovich Aleksandr Ales Adamovich Anatoli Kuznetsov anniversary anti-Semitism armed forces Babi Yar battle battle of Moscow Berlin bones boys Brezhnev celebration cemetery commemorative Communist Party comrades cult culture dead death decades Den Pobedy died Dozor Ehrenburg enemy eternal flame fascist Fate fighting film flowers friends front Garrard German Gorbachev graves heroes Hill of Prostrations historian Hitler holiday Ilya Ehrenburg inspired Jewish Jews June Katyn Khrushchev Kiev killed Komsomol Kuznetsov Lenin Leningrad Lishin lives looked Masha memorial Mikhail Gefter military million monument Moscow mother motherland museum Nazi NKVD officers Operation Barbarossa Patriotic Patriotic War photographs Piskarevskoe poem Poland political popular posters postwar Pravda propaganda published Red Army Red Square ritual Russian Rzhev sacred songs Soviet Army Soviet soldiers Soviet Union speech Stalin Stalingrad Stalinist symbolic thousands tion truth veterans victims Victory Day Vladimir Volgograd wartime woman World wrote young youth Zhukov Zoya