“De-liberated”, Stigmatised and “Ungrateful”: Practices of Bolshevik “Re-Sovietization” of Ukraine and Ukrainians (1943–early 1950s)
Articles in English
Olena Stiazhkina
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2781-4261
Published 2023-10-23
https://doi.org/10.61903/GR.2023.112
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Keywords

Re-Sovietisation
marauders
Ukrainian nationalism
repressions
Russian imperialism

How to Cite

Stiazhkina, O. . (2023). “De-liberated”, Stigmatised and “Ungrateful”: Practices of Bolshevik “Re-Sovietization” of Ukraine and Ukrainians (1943–early 1950s). Genocidas Ir Rezistencija, 1(53), 255–273. https://doi.org/10.61903/GR.2023.112

Abstract

The purpose of this article is to analyse the first steps of “liberation” and restoration of the pre-war status quo for the Bolshevik government in Ukraine. The task is to find out what practices of “liberation” the people experienced under the Soviet occupation; in what way did the Bolsheviks react to the revitalization of the national idea; how re-Sovietization became the foundation for the restoration of the Russian imperial order; how Ukraine became a kind of a bridgehead for reinventing the model of Soviet imperialism in its “Russo-centric” posture.

In this text, re-Sovietization will be considered as the mechanisms and practices (together with the tools) of the Bolshevik government in relation to Ukrainian communities that came out of the war with intentions of public solidarity and the ability to resist, dangerous for the Kremlin.

The source base of the work includes archival documents of central authorities, security services, memoirs, statistical data, and correspondence. The methodological basis is the concept of agency, which implies the ability to choose options for people’s own life under any circumstances.

Conclusions: right at the first stages of returning to Ukrainian lands, the Bolsheviks resumed the repressive and marauding practices that were widespread before the World War II. Through condemnation and repressive policy, a blow was struck on the Ukrainian national revival. Due to broad campaigns against “Ukrainian bourgeois nationalism” and for “gratitude to the Russian people for liberation”, Ukrainians were “pushed aside” both as victims and as heroes of the World War II.

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