000 01811nab a2200241uu 4500
001 28347
005 20220802160551.0
008 140731
100 1 _aAdler, Nanci
_913370
245 1 0 _aReconciliation with – or rehabilitation of – the Soviet past?
336 _aTexto
_btxt
_2rdacontent
337 _asin mediación
_bn
_2rdamedia
338 _aVolumen
_bnc
_2rdacarrier
500 _a[Abstract Post-Soviet Russia’s ambivalent efforts to confront its Stalinist past have generated heated discussion about what should be remembered. Official ambivalence is reflected in school history texts that emphasize Soviet achievements, in commissions that gate-keep archives and historical facts, and in monuments and commemorations. In consequence, the surviving victims of Stalinism are insufficiently acknowledged, let alone compensated. This tension forms the central focus of this article as it explores the individual, public, and official efforts in the aftermath of seven decades of state-sponsored repression to remember, represent and even rehabilitate the Stalinist past. The prevalence of the state-sponsored narrative over the victims’ counter-histories indicates the persistence of a post-Communist repression which is part cause and part effect of the failure/lack of transitional justice mechanisms.]
650 4 _aMEMORIA
_92
650 4 _aRECONCILIACION
_9858
650 4 _aREPRESION
_9181
650 4 _aSTALINISMO
_92478
773 0 _g58 (vol.2, nro.1)
_w27494
_dCalifornia : Sage Publications, 2008-.
_gVol. 5, no. 3 (2012), p. 327-338
_tMemory studies. 2012; Vol.5, nro.3
_x1750-6980
942 _cARTICULOS
999 _c16936
_d16936
003 arbaides
773 0 _010311
_921237
_a
_b
_dCalifornia : Sage Publications, 2008-.
_o21934
_tMemory studies
_w(arbaides)27494
_x1750-6980
_z