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The Great War in Russian Memory
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Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
1. Introduction: The Great War in Russian Memory
2. Spirituality, the Supernatural, and the Memory of World War I
3. The Paradoxes of Gender in Soviet War Memory
4. Violence, Morality, and the Conscience of the Warrior
5. World War I and the Definition of Russianness
6. Arrested History
7. Disappearance and Reappearance
8. Legacies of the Great War
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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Commemorating WWI in the Soviet Union

About the Author

Karen Petrone is Associate Professor of History at the University of Kentucky. She is author of Life Has Become More Joyous, Comrades: Celebrations in the Time of Stalin (IUP, 2000) and editor (with Valerie Kivelson, Michael S. Flier, and Nancy Shields Kollmann) of The New Muscovite Cultural History: A Collection in Honor of Daniel B. Rowland.

Reviews

"An original work of serious scholarship... Petrone engages with a flourishing literature on the cultural consequences of the First World War." Peter Gatrell, author of A Whole Empire Walking "Petrone makes very important contributions not only to the field of Russian and Soviet history but to the field of World War I studies as well." Joshua A. Sanborn, Lafayette College "Intermingling WWI memories and Russian Revolution mythology, this study provides a brief but fascinating overview of the complexity of Great War memory." - World War I Bridges

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