The 20th century in the Baltic region had it all. The turbulent century did not spare the small territory and its population, which was visited by practically every calamity the modern era had to offer. At westward edge of the Russian Empire, the region was subjected to the harsh Russification drive of the late imperial era. With diverse religions and nationalities and its geographic buffer between the Empire and the German Reich, it was also the crucible of key battles during and mass refugee crises following World War I. In the interwar period, the rise of the independent Baltic States precipitated myriad political experiments and population politics together with constant maneuvering to preserve their fragile and ultimately short-lived sovereignty. World War II ushered in a period of unprecedented extremes with waves of brutal occupations, deportations, the Holocaust, the subjection of the territory to the communist experiment, and ultimately, the decimation of state sovereignty for the next four decades.
The almost unavoidable outcome of this course of events has been the focus on the region from the point of view of the large powers that sought to dominate and shape it. The rather limited number of foreign scholars who command Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian, fortified this orientation in the writing of the history of the region. The present volume seeks to shift the attention to the local point of view through the writing of Baltic scholars. By no means a comprehensive expose, the essays nevertheless explore key junctures in the history of the three Baltic countries as viewed “from within,” both then and now.
The almost unavoidable outcome of this course of events has been the focus on the region from the point of view of the large powers that sought to dominate and shape it. The rather limited number of foreign scholars who command Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian, fortified this orientation in the writing of the history of the region. The present volume seeks to shift the attention to the local point of view through the writing of Baltic scholars. By no means a comprehensive expose, the essays nevertheless explore key junctures in the history of the three Baltic countries as viewed “from within,” both then and now.
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The present volume seeks to shift the attention to the local point of view through the writing of Baltic scholars. By no means a comprehensive expose, the essays nevertheless explore key junctures in the history of the three Baltic countries as viewed ""from within"", both then and now.
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- Introduction: War, Revolution, and Governance: The Baltic Countries in the Twentieth Century
- Lazar Fleishman and Amir Weiner
- From Self-Defense to Revolution: Lithuanian Paramilitary Groups in 1918 and 1919
- Tomas Balkelis
- The Latvian War of Independence 1918-1920 and the United States
- Ēriks Jēkabsons
- Nation-Building and Gender Issues in Inter-War Latvia: Representations and Reality
- Ineta Lipša
- The Political System and Ideology of Karlis Ulmanis’s Authoritarian Regime, 15 May 1934 – 17 June 1940
- Aivars Stranga
- The Rise of the Radical Right, the Demise of Democracy, and the Advent of Authoritarianism in Interwar Estonia
- Andres Kasekamp
- The Czechoslovak Crisis and the Baltic States, 1938: A Fateful Year for the Baltic States
- Magnus Ilmjärv
- Government, Society, and Political Crisis in Lithuania, 1938-1940
- Artūras Svarauskas
- Latvia, Nazi German Occupation, and the Western Allies, 1941–1945
- Uldis Neiburgs
- Memory of World War II and the Politics of Recognition: An Outline of the Post-1989 Mnemohistory of Estonian “Freedom-Fighters”
- Ene Kõresaar
- Discrediting the Diaspora: The KGB Search for War Criminals in the West
- Kristina Burinskaitė
- After Stalin: The Kremlin’s “New Nationalities Policy” and Estonia in 1953
- Tōnu Tannberg
- Doubly Marginalized People: The Hidden Stories of Estonian Society (1940-1960)
- Aigi Rahi-Tamm
- Women in the Soviet Latvian Nomenklatura (1940–1990)
- Daina Bleiere
- The Communist Party Second Secretary in the Soviet Republic as the Interpreter of Moscow’s Decisions: The Case of Nikolai Belukha in Soviet Latvia in 1963-1978
- Saulius Grybkauskas
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781618116208
Publisert
2018-06-21
Utgiver
Academic Studies Press; Academic Studies Press
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
155 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
318
Om bidragsyterne
A native of Latvia, Lazar Fleishman has published and edited numerous works on Russian and East European history, literature and culture. He is Professor of Stanford University and has also taught at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, University of California, Berkeley, Harvard, Princeton and other universities in the U.S. and Europe.
Amir Weiner teaches history at Stanford University. He is the author of Making Sense of War, Landscaping the Human Garden and numerous articles and edited volumes on the impact of World War II on the Soviet polity, the social history of WWII and Soviet frontier politics. His forthcoming book, The KGB: Ruthless Sword, Imperfect Shield, will be published by Yale University Press in 2019.