The Holodomor in Global Perspective - (Ukrainian Voices) by Jonathon Vsetecka & Daria Mattingly (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Between 1932 and 1933, millions of people in Ukraine died of forced starvation.
- About the Author: Dr Daria Mattingly is a Lecturer in Contemporary International History at the University of Chichester in West Sussex, UK.
- 380 Pages
- History, Europe
- Series Name: Ukrainian Voices
Description
About the Book
This book enables us to reckon with the global implications of mass starvation in Ukraine from 1932 to 1933 and to understand them on a scale that transcends the borders of Ukraine and the Soviet Union.Book Synopsis
Between 1932 and 1933, millions of people in Ukraine died of forced starvation. The famine, now known as the Holodomor, became one of the most deplorable acts in the history of the Soviet Union and the wider twentieth century. The Holodomor occupies an important place in Ukrainian and Soviet history, but less is known about the famine's role in world history. Much has been written about the intents behind the famine, its genocidal particulars, and the effects of the famine within the borders of Ukraine. Still, a significantly smaller amount of work has examined how the Holodomor affected and was affected by global economics, politics, and international relations during the 1930s. The famine was covered in hundreds of press reports worldwide and debated and discussed by governments and world leaders. It became a crisis that captured the attention of foreign observers on every continent.
This collected volume is the first to address the history of the Holodomor from a global perspective. The chapters present perspectives on famine from a multidisciplinary approach that enables us to reckon with the global implications of mass starvation in Ukraine from 1932 to 1933 and to understand them on a scale that transcends the borders of Ukraine and the Soviet Union. This book results from the germination of ideas that the contributors first presented to a conference at the University of Cambridge in 2022. They include, in alphabetical order, Roser Alvarez Klee, Olga Andriewsky, Ray Gamache, Ola Hnatiuk, Bohdan Klid, Andriy Kohut, Wiktoria Kudela-Swiatek, Sara Nesteruk, Matthew Pauly, Henry Prown, Yuri Shapoval, Iryna Skubii, Atanas Terleckas, Serhy Yekelchyk, and Larysa Zasiekina.
About the Author
Dr Daria Mattingly is a Lecturer in Contemporary International History at the University of Chichester in West Sussex, UK.
Dr John Vsetecka is an Assistant Professor of History at Nova Southeastern University in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
Anne Applebaum is a staff writer for the Atlantic and Pulitzer-prize winning historian.