Zero Point Ukraine. Olena Stiazhkina. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Olena Stiazhkina
Издательство: Автор
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Жанр произведения: Историческая литература
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9783838275505
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and activation of the mode of visibility and recognition; not only do they request historical visibility but also political apologies from those who inflicted violence, ignored and hushed up genocides and social catastrophes. “Historical wounds” do not let the past “cool down,” locking it instead in a perpetual and inescapable present. As Chris Lorenz says, “the idea of a hot present transforming into a cold past is by itself a desired time model for those who would wish to see the past as over and done with. Usually they are the ones who face a sentence themselves.”19

      The above-mentioned methodological challenges are not the only difficulties encountered by Ukrainians when conceptualizing the history of World War II. The intricate complexity of what was happening in Ukrainian lands from the 1930s to the 1950s is still such that eighty years’ distance makes the geographical borders of these lands perfectly clear. Yet they were not so clear and visible to those involved in the maelstrom of war and in the “Soviet nation-building” of the period. Due to the colonial practice of cutting up the borders (both of administrative regions within Ukraine and between other republics) implemented by Moscow in the acquired territories, many Ukrainians happened to be “thrown out” beyond Ukraine’s borders. Local communities were ruined or (as in the case of the Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, incorporated into the Ukrainian SSR) other nations were considered as “almost Ukrainians.” Incorporation into Ukraine was not an obvious step for the people of Zakarpattia, whose leaders at the time of the fall of Czechoslovakia envisioned their self-preservation in a union with the Reich. Ukrainians in Poland were perceived as a problem and a threat, so the Polish government by means of “pacification,” encouraging “osadnik” settlers, and “consolidation of the state” imposed colonial practices and assimilation policies aimed at forming some “Polish Ukrainians.” Meanwhile, a powerful Ukrainian diaspora in Europe and in North America already existed, being almost the only Ukrainians who knew for certain that they lived not in Ukrainian lands.