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22/02/24 – THE CREATION OF THE UKRAINIAN BORDER, 1919-1954 – STEPHAN RINDLISBACHER (European University Viadrina)

22/02/24 – THE CREATION OF THE UKRAINIAN BORDER, 1919-1954 – STEPHAN RINDLISBACHER (European University Viadrina)

Ośrodek Kultury Francuskiej i Studiów Frankofońskich UW, Wydział Socjologii UW oraz Sekcja Socjologii Historycznej Polskiego Towarzystwa Socjologicznego zapraszają na spotkanie z cyklu

CZWARTKI Z SOCJOLOGIĄ HISTORYCZNĄ : 

THE CREATION OF THE UKRAINIAN BORDER, 1919-1954 – STEPHAN RINDLISBACHER (European University Viadrina)

Czwartek 22 lutego 2024 r., godz. 17.00

Referent: STEPHAN RINDLISBACHER (European University Viadrina)
Komentować będzie: OLEKSANDR POLIANICHEV (Södertörn University)
Spotkanie poprowadzi: TOMASZ RAWSKI (WS UW)
Spotkanie odbędzie się 22.02.2024 o godz. 17.00 w sali 3.012 Ośrodka Kultury Francuskiej UW, ul. Dobra 55 w Warszawie. Możliwe będzie uczestnictwo zdalne na platformie Zoom. Zainteresowanych prosimy o kontakt mailowy z Tomaszem Rawskim (t.rawski@is.uw.edu.pl) lub sekretariatem OKF UW (okf@uw.edu.pl) do 22.02, godz. 14.00. Łącza do seminarium wyślemy drogą mailową.
THE CREATION OF THE UKRAINIAN BORDER, 1919-1954
Ukraine’s territory is a product of political decisions that date back to the Soviet Union and the Second World War. My contribution aims to recon-struct these processes of territorial formation. I divide my argument in three chronological steps. First, I explain why the creation of Soviet Ukraine in 1919 was no means to divide and rule, but a strategy of manag-ing the diversity of Soviet space. Then, I explore the territorial gains in and after the Second World War. Finally, I ask why the party and state leadership implemented the territorial transfer of Crimea from Russia to Ukraine in 1954. Thereby, I deconstruct the popular myth of the peninsula being “Khrushchev’s gift”.
STEPHAN RINDLISBACHER is a historian specialising in Eastern European history. In his current projects, he focuses on national policies of the early Soviet state and their implementation in regional administration. However, he is also interested in the history of terrorism, political commemoratory culture as well as in the history of Russian and Soviet paper money. Prior to this, he worked as teaching assistant at the Historical Department of the University of Bern. He wrote his PhD on the pre-revolutionary Russian radical movement. He studied modern history, Slavic as well as Islamic studies. He was educated across the European continent at the Universities of Bern, Zagreb and the State University of St. Petersburg.