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This is the first comprehensive study in English of Soviet women
who fought against the genocidal, misogynist, Nazi enemy on the
Eastern Front during the Second World War. Drawing on a vast array
of original archival, memoir, and published sources, this book
captures the everyday experiences of Soviet women fighting, living
and dying on the front.
Stalin's death and denunciation at the 1956 Twentieth Party Congress unleashed a furor among soviet historians. Despite attempts of Stalinist apparatchiks to stem the tide of historical revision, in the 1960s a small group of anti-Stalinist historians continued to fight for historical truth, setting them on a collision course with the party political elite. Using intensive interviews and original manuscript material, Markwick provides a unique, insiders' account of the battle for the Soviet past in the 1960s which paved the way for the dramatic upheavel in Soviet historical writing occcasioned by perestroika.
This is the first comprehensive study in English of Soviet women
who fought against the genocidal, misogynist, Nazi enemy on the
Eastern Front during the Second World War. Drawing on a vast array
of original archival, memoir, and published sources, this book
captures the everyday experiences of Soviet women fighting, living
and dying on the front.
This book explores the political significance of the development of
historical revisionism in the USSR under Khrushchev in the wake of
the Twentieth Congress of the CPSU and its demise with the onset of
the 'period of stagnation' under Brezhnev. On the basis of
intensive interviews and original manuscript material, the book
demonstrates that the vigorous rejuvenation of historiography
undertaken by Soviet historians in the 1960s conceptually cleared
the way for and fomented the dramatic upheaval in Soviet historical
writing occasioned by the advent of perestroika.
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