Kyiv as Regime City: The Return of Soviet Power after Nazi Occupation

Kyiv as Regime City: The Return of Soviet Power after Nazi Occupation

by Martin J. Blackwell
Kyiv as Regime City: The Return of Soviet Power after Nazi Occupation

Kyiv as Regime City: The Return of Soviet Power after Nazi Occupation

by Martin J. Blackwell

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Overview

How the Soviet Union reestablished power in a changed Kyiv following the retreat of Nazi forces, consolidating its regime as it headed into the Cold War.

Kyiv as Regime City charts the resettlement of the Ukrainian capital after Nazi occupation, focusing on the efforts of returning Soviet rulers to regain legitimacy within a Moscow-centered regime still attending to the warfront. Beginning with the Ukrainian Communists' inability to both purge their capital city of "socially dangerous" people and prevent the arrival of "unorganized" evacuees from the rear, this book chronicles how a socially and ethnically diverse milieu of Kyivans reassembled after many years of violence and terror.

While the Ukrainian Communists successfully guarded entry into their privileged, elite ranks and monitored the masses' mood toward their superiors in Moscow, the party failed to conscript a labor force and rebuild housing, leading the Stalin regime to adopt new tactics to legitimize itself among the large Ukrainian and Jewish populations who once again called the city home. Drawing on sources from the once-closed central, regional, and local archives of the former Soviet Union, this study is essential reading for those seeking to understand how the Kremlin reestablished its power in Kyiv, consolidating its regime as the Cold War with the United States began.

Funded by the Knowledge Unlatched Select 2023 collection, this title is available as an Open Access ebook under the Creative Commons License: CC BY NC

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781648250538
Publisher: BOYDELL & BREWER INC
Publication date: 10/25/2022
Series: ISSN , #16
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

MARTIN J. BLACKWELL is Associate Professor of history at the University of North Georgia in Dahlonega.

Table of Contents

Introduction
"The Capital Is Being Settled All Over Again": Resettlement from Fall 1943 to Fall 1944
"There Was No Real Battle against Illegal Entry": Resettlement from Fall 1944 to Fall 1946
"People Are Going for the Party Who Are Forcing Us to Be Justifiably Careful": The Reassembled Elite
"A Textual Implementation of the Law . . . Was Not Carried Out": The Reassembled Masses
"The State's Dignity Is Higher Than His Own Dignity": The Relegitimization of Soviet Power
"Tashkent Partisans" and "German Bitches": Relationships with Soviet Power
Conclusion
Notes
Index
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