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                <text>Zustrichi i proshchanni͡a : spohady. Knyha II</text>
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                <text>A continuation of Зустрічі і прощання: Спогади (книга перша), the second volume of Hryhorii Kostiuk’s memoirs is a unique document of the development of Ukrainian culture and community outside Ukraine. This volume depicts the extraordinarily dynamic, stormy, and creative life of Ukrainians in the western diaspora in the second half of the twentieth century.&#13;
&#13;
Kostiuk continues his saga about the important events in his life from the beginnings of the German occupation of central Ukraine (September 1941) to the end of the century. He describes his move from the Donbas to Kyiv in 1941. From there he goes on to Lviv, then to Plauen and Munich. In each of these places, Kostiuk involves himself in Ukrainian community, cultural, and political organizations, which gives him plenty of opportunities to meet with prominent figures. Kostiuk provides the reader with interesting portraits of such authors as Yurii Klen, Ivan Bahriany, Halyna Zhurba, Mykola Shlemkevych, Todos Osmachka, Yurii Kosach, and many other activists of the Ukrainian diaspora.&#13;
&#13;
Kostiuk was a participant (often a leading one) in many important events in the life of Ukrainians outside Ukraine. The reader will find detailed accounts of such events as the founding of the Ukrainian Revolutionary-Democratic Party, the preservation of Volodymyr Vynnychenko’s personal archives, the dedication of a monument to Taras Shevchenko in Washington, DC, the founding of the Slovo Association of Ukrainian Writers in Exile, and about the first attempts to establish contacts with the intelligentsia of Soviet Ukraine. &#13;
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&#13;
During his student years in Kyiv (1925–29) Kostiuk studied with such famous scholars as M. Zerov, P. Fylypovich, B. Yakubsky, S. Maslov, and M. Kalynovych. In his post-graduate years in Kharkiv (1930–33), Kostiuk’s instructors included V. S. Boyko, A. Shamrai, and O. Biletsky. In Kharkiv, Kostiuk was involved in the work of the literary organization Prolitfront, where he cooperated with M. Khvyliovy, M. Kulish, P. Tychyna, H. Epik, D. Feldman O. Vyshnia, and other leading literary figures of the 1920s. Among his friends, Kostiuk counted H. Kosynka, Yu. Yanovsky, V. Mysyk, B. Teneta, V. Sosiura, L. Pervomaiisky, I. Bahryany, T. Masenko, O. Korniichuk, and many others.&#13;
&#13;
During Stalin’s reign of terror, Kostiuk was arrested and sentenced without trial to five years in the concentration camps of Vorkuta. There he met with many veterans of the revolutionary period and survived the mass terror of 1937–8. The volume concludes with the outbreak of the Second World War. These memoirs are continued in Зустрічі і прощання: Спогади (книга друга).</text>
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                <text>This collection of forty-five essays was circulated by Zerov’s students at Kyiv University in 1928–29. Zerov’s lectures shaped the views of a generation of scholars and students, and Lektsii z Istorii Ukrains’koi Literatury makes a valuable contribution to any student’s library of Ukrainian literary criticism. Zerov’s approach may be described as historic-cultural but embracing the methods of formalist and sociological analysis. In practice, Zerov first describes and analyzes a work by tracing the cultural, literary, social and ideological development of the author, as well as investigating the characteristic techniques and style of the work and its integral connection with the theme. Finally, Zerov places the work in perspective through a comprehensive view of the work in its time and its place in the evolution of the genre. The result is a thoroughly scholarly and systematic treatment of literary history.</text>
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&#13;
It describes the author’s early life and his involvement with the communist movement under Polish rule. After the Soviet invasion of Western Ukraine in the autumn of 1939, Shumuk became disillusioned with communism. During the war, he joined the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, which was engaged in a struggle to drive both German and Soviet occupants from Ukrainian soil. But in 1945, he was captured by Soviet troops and sentenced to death (later commuted to life imprisonment).&#13;
&#13;
Life Sentence gives a vivid portrayal of camp life: the factions, the intrigues, and the unprecedented challenge to the Soviet authorities that was mounted by the strike in the Norilsk area in 1953. Throughout the book, the character of Shumuk shines through. He remains a symbol of defiant challenge to a totalitarian regime.</text>
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A camp at Banff/Castle Mountain operated between 1915 and 1917. More than 600 internees were put to work on various projects in Rocky Mountain Park (now Banff National Park), which was being developed at that time as Canada’s first national park. The diary of the Banff/Castle Mountain camp provides detailed insight into the practice of Canada’s internment policy during the First World War and reveals a unique episode in the human history of Canada’s national park system. Historical landmarks in Banff National Park such as the Bankhead Mine, the Tunnel Mountain Road and Trans-Canada Highway, the Spray River Bridge, and the Banff Springs golf course were constructed, rebuilt, or extended by “Austro-Hungarian” civilian non-combatants interned at Banff/Castle Mountain.</text>
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                <text>In 1954, the three-hundredth anniversary of the Pereiaslav Treaty of 1654 between Russia and Ukraine was celebrated with unprecedented fervor throughout the Soviet Union. The event was resurrected ostensibly to justify the position of Ukrainians within the Soviet Union as a “younger brother” of the Russian people. What actually happened at Pereiaslav? Did the Ukrainians accept the tsar as their sovereign? Or was it rather a treaty among equals, soon to be broken by the Russian side? The issues have been obscured by ideology, partial reporting, and the absence of documentation.&#13;
&#13;
This volume includes a historical survey, excerpts from the Cossack chronicles, the conclusions and disputes of leading historians from the seventeenth to the present century, and a careful survey of Soviet historiography, with its changing emphases. The author’s analysis is detached and scholarly. He refuses to be drawn into political debates but instead focuses closely on the problematic issues: the documents controversy, the role of Bohdan Kmelnytsky, Buturlin’s refusal to take an oath guaranteeing traditional Cossack rights, and the status of Ukraine as decreed by the treaty.&#13;
&#13;
Pereiaslav 1654: A Historiographical Study is essential reading not only for scholars of Ukrainian and Russian history, but for all who wish to understand the historical roots of Ukraine’s relations with Russia.&#13;
&#13;
For a fundamental analysis of the Pereiaslav Treaty of 1654 see also Mykhailo Hrushevsky’s History of Ukraine-Rus’. Volume 9, book 2, part 1: The Cossack Age, 1654-1657.</text>
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                <text>This volume, a collective study of the post-World War II Ukrainian emigrants in Germany and Austria, departs from the standard approach to immigration studies. Instead of focusing on the immigrants’ adjustment to their host societies (the United States, Canada, Australia, the countries of Latin America, and others), the approach in this volume assumes the primary importance of the pre-immigration experience. The twenty-five contributions to this book present a detailed analysis of the social conditions that shaped the Ukrainian displaced persons, with particular attention to the five-year period that many of them spent in internationally organized resettlement camps.&#13;
&#13;
The essays in this volume are grouped in nine sections covering the most important facets of the displaced persons’ lives. These include an assessment of the DP phenomenon in the context of Ukrainian history; its demographic dimensions; an examination of the economic and organizational structure of the DP camps; the role of political parties and nationalist ideology; the activities of the Catholic and Orthodox churches; the establishment of schools and women’s organizations; the proliferation of literary, cultural, and scholarly activity; Soviet efforts at repatriation and the Allied response; the resettlement of Ukrainians in the USA and Canada; and a sociological and psychological interpretation of the DP experience. Four contributions by eyewitnesses round out the volume.</text>
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                <text>The book Letters from Kiev is an eyewitness account of the political and cultural changes in the tumultuous months of 1990–91 that led to Ukraine’s declaration of independence. Expertly translated by Myrna Kostash, the text is fully annotated for the Western reader by Dr. Bohdan Krawchenko, to whom Solomea Pavlychko originally wrote her letters. Also included are a number of memorable pictures of the crisis by Ukrainian photographers.&#13;
&#13;
Note: This book was edited and printed before the government of independent Ukraine officially adopted ‘Kyiv’ as the English-language spelling of Ukraine’s capital. Until that time ‘Kiev’ was the accepted English-language spelling in scholarly publications, including those of the CIUS Press. Unfortunately, that spelling is still used by many publishers, newspapers, and magazines. CIUS Press, however, has used ‘Kyiv,’ ‘Odesa,’ and Ukrainian transliterations of Ukraine’s place-names in its publications since 1993.</text>
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&#13;
Chapters include:&#13;
&#13;
    Ukraine—On the Road to Democracy?&#13;
    Agreeing on the Rules of the Game&#13;
    President Kravchuk and the Philosophy of State Building&#13;
    State Building in Ukraine: The Practice of State Organization&#13;
    Coercive Control&#13;
    Nation Building&#13;
    Parliament and Elections&#13;
    Party Systems, Presidential Elections, and the Public&#13;
    The Economy: The Slow Road to Reform and the Fast Road to Riches&#13;
    National Security, Defence, and Foreign Policy&#13;
    From Communist Dictatorship to Pseudo-Democracy&#13;
&#13;
Taking a comparative approach, Bohdan Harasymiw breaks free of the usual historical-cultural mode of dealing with Ukrainian politics. Step by step, he examines the primary elements of a modern democratic state and the degree to which these are in place: an agreed-on set of rules of the game in the form of an accepted constitution; a state capable of governing and claiming the loyalty of its people; a parliament representative of the public and able to legislate; a bureaucracy skilled at fashioning and implementing public policies, and not just following orders; a nation of fellow citizens living as a community; political parties channelling the interests of, and responsive to, their followers; elections that reflect the preferences of the voters; and policies ensuring the security and well-being of both state and society. These are analyzed in the light of other countries’ experience with these institutions and processes. As a result, a comprehensive portrait of Ukraine’s politics, which can be characterized as “post-Communist” but not yet “post-Soviet,” emerges.</text>
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                <text>The Word and Wax explores the fascinating medical folk ritual of wax pouring used by some members of the Alberta Ukrainian community as a means of driving away fear and curing minor ailments. The ceremony is of the magico-religious and oral-incantational genre of folk medicine, incorporating Christian as well as non-Christian imagery. The Word and Wax is essential reading to anyone interested in the rich folkloric tradition brought to Alberta by early Ukrainian immigrants to Canada. The volume includes transliterations of the incantations of nine wax healers who practice or have practiced in Alberta.&#13;
&#13;
Among Ukrainians in Alberta, ethnography is the study of everyday people in cultural context. It involves the study of songs and stories, material culture, customs, art, and all types of traditional elements in life. Customs at Christmas, at weddings and other special times reveal the soul of a community. Ukrainian folklore has been associated with the study of village traditions in previous centuries; now it also includes twentieth-century culture, both in Ukraine and in Canada. The Canadian Series in Ukrainian Ethnology publishes scholarship dealing with the culture and folklore of Ukrainians and Ukrainians in Canada. It is published jointly by the Huculak Chair of Ukrainian Culture and Ethnography and the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies. See Ukrainians and Alberta in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine.</text>
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                <text>The book Politics of Multiculturalism is the memoir of an academic whose expertise in the education of Canadian minorities led him to take on a major political role in the Canadian multicultural movement. Born in the Ukrainian bloc settlement of east-central Alberta and educated at the universities of Alberta, Minnesota, and Harvard, Manoly R. Lupul combined the outlook of a liberal secular humanist with a conviction that modern society could be enriched by the cultural potential of ethnicity. His concern for the expansion of minority linguistic and cultural rights in Canada was sharpened by a direct encounter with the policy of Russification in Ukraine during a sabbatical leave in the late 1960s.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Lupul’s involvement in Canadian multiculturalism began with the drafting and passage of Alberta’s first school legislation for bilingual programs (1971); similar laws were subsequently enacted in Saskatchewan and Manitoba. He went on to serve as an executive member of the Canadian Consultative Council on Multiculturalism and a member of the Alberta Cultural Heritage Council. In 1976 Dr. Lupul became the founding director of the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies at the University of Alberta, the first publicly funded institution of its kind outside Ukraine. He contributed significantly to the development of the multiculturalism section of the Canadian constitution (1982). This memoir, based not only on personal writings and recollections but also on extensive documentation, brings together much information previously unavailable in print. In his frank account, Dr. Lupul offers unrivalled first-person insight into the aspirations that gave rise to Canada’s policy of multiculturalism and the interplay of forces that shaped and blunted its development. The book will appeal to readers interested in Canadian culture and politics and, more generally, in the problem of promoting minority-group rights in democratic societies.</text>
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                <text>Ukraine and Russia in their historical encounter</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Ukraine's attainment of political independence since 1991 has focused world attention on relations between Ukraine and Russia, the two most powerful successor states to the USSR. This collection of essays by eminent specialists provides a reliable and detailed guide to the subject, examining the historical, political, cultural, religious, economic, and demographic aspects of Ukrainian-Russian relations.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Table of Contents&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Omeljan Pritsak, The Problem of a Ukrainian-Russian Dialogue&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Jaroslaw Pelenski, The Contest for the "Kievan Inheritance"&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Edward L. Keenan, Muscovite Perceptions of Other East Slavs before 1654&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Hans-Joachim Torke, Political Relations between Musovey and Ukraine in the Seventeenth Century&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Marc Raeff, Ukraine and Imperial Russia: Intellectual and Political Encounters from the Seventeenth Century to the Nineteenth Century&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Edgar Hosch, Peter I and Ukraine&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Martha Bohachevsky-Chomiak, Ukrainian and Russian Women: Co-operation and Conflict&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;John A. Armstrong, Myth and History in the Evolution of Ukrainian Consciousness&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;John S. Reshetar Jr., Ukrainian and Russian Perceptions of the Ukrainian Revolution&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Yaroslav Bilinsky, Political Relations Between Russians and Ukrainians in the USSR: the 1970s and Beyond&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;James Cracraft, The Mask of Culture: Baroque Art in Russia and Ukraine, 1600-1750&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;George G. Grabowicz, Ukrainian-Russian Literary Relations in the Nineteenth Century: A Formulation of the Problem&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Bohdan R. Bociurkiw, The Issues of Ukrainianization and Autocephaly of the Orthodox Church in Ukrainian-Russian Relations, 1917-1921&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Ralph S. Clem, Demographic Change among Russians and Ukrainians in the Soviet Union&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Peter Woroby, Socio-Economic Changes in the USSR and Their Impact on Ukrainians and Russians&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Nicholas V. Riasanovsky, Conclusion&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, To the Conference on Russian-Ukrainian Relations in Toronto  &lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Open Letter to the Conference on Russian-Ukrainian Relations and to the Conference of Peoples Enslaved by Communism&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Jaroslaw Pelenski, Commentary on Aleksandr Solzhenitskyn's "Open Letter to the Conference on Russian-Ukrainian Relations".&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This is one of the volumes on Ukraine and its neighbours published by the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press. Other volumes deal with Jewish-Ukrainian relations (&lt;em&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.ciuspress.com/catalogue/history/300/ukrainian-jewish-relations-in-historical-perspective-%28third-edition%29"&gt;Ukrainian-Jewish Relations in Historical Perspective&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/em&gt;), Polish-Ukrainian relations (&lt;em&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.ciuspress.com/catalogue/history/40/poland-and-ukraine--past-and-present"&gt;Poland and Ukraine: Past and Present&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/em&gt;), German-Ukrainian relations (&lt;em&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.ciuspress.com/catalogue/history/21/german-ukrainian-relations-in-historical-perspective"&gt;German-Ukrainian Relations in Historical Perspective&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/em&gt;), and another book on Russian-Ukrainian relations (&lt;em&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.ciuspress.com/catalogue/history/4/culture%2C-nation-and-identity"&gt;Culture, Nation and Identity: The Ukrainian-Russian Encounter [1600–1945]&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/em&gt;).&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Omeljan Pritsak, Jaroslaw Pelenski, Edward L. Keenan, Hans-Joachim Torke, Marc Raeff, Edgar Hosch,Martha Bohachevsky-Chomiak, John A. Armstrong,,John S. Reshetar Jr., Yaroslav Bilinsky, James Cracraft, George G. Grabowicz, Bohdan R. Bociurkiw, Ralph S. Clem, Peter Woroby, Nicholas V. Riasanovsky, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
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                <text>Based on meticulous study and analysis of Soviet sources, particularly the Soviet press, it encompasses Soviet Ukraine from the death of Stalin to Shcherbytsky's rule as first party secretary. A final chapter on society examines economic aspects, religion and religious movements in Ukraine, and the Russification of Ukrainian society fostered by the Soviet regime.&#13;
&#13;
The author of numerous books and scholarly articles, Borys Lewytzkyj (1915–84) was a prominent authority on Soviet affairs. Born in Vienna he became well known as a publicist and journalist serving as editor in chief of the newspaper Nove selo (1936–1939) in Lviv. During the Second World War, he was active in the Ukrainian Democratic Revolutionary Party (UDRP), led by Ivan Mitringa, which took part in the resistance movement against the German occupants.</text>
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                <text>Borys Lewytzkyj, having emigrated to Munich after the war, became co-editor of the UDRP organ Vpered (Foreward) from 1949 to 1956, contributing a variety of articles about life in the USSR. He was an advisor to the West German Social Democratic Party on Soviet affairs, established his own research bureau in Munich, and published many books on Soviet politics.</text>
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&#13;
Essay titles include:&#13;
&#13;
    Kievan-Rus' and Sixteenth-Seventeenth-Century Ukraine&#13;
    The Problem of Nobilities in the Ukrainian Past: The Polish Period, 1569-1648&#13;
    Problems in Studying the Post-Khmelnytsky Ukrainian Elite (1650s to 1830s)&#13;
    Cossack Ukraine and the Turco-Islamic World&#13;
    Ukrainian Cities in the Nineteenth Century&#13;
    Ukrainian Cities during the Revolution and the Interwar Era&#13;
    Urbanization in Ukraine since the Second World War&#13;
    The Role of the City in Ukrainian History Evolution of the Ukrainian Literary Language </text>
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                <text>Contributors include Omeljan Pritsak, Frank Sysyn, Zenon Kohut, Orest Subtelny, Patricia Herlihy, George Shevelov, Roman Szporluk and others. This volume also includes a thirty-five-page round-table discussion. </text>
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                <text>This volume brings together a rich selection of sixteen analytical essays and seven programmatic statements written by those directly involved in the struggle of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA). The problems addressed include German and Russian imperialism, the nature of fascism and its relation to communism, and the strategy and tactics of the Ukrainian national-liberation movement. There is a comprehensive introduction, and each essay is fully annotated.</text>
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                <text>This authoritative study, first published in Polish as Komunistyczna Partia Zachodniej Ukrainy, 1919–1929 (Cracow, 1976), examines the development of the Communist Party of Western Ukraine from its inception in 1919 until 1929, when a major split occured in its ranks over the issue of Stalin's emerging dictatorship.</text>
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                <text>Janusz Radziejowski (1925–2002), historian, was born in Kyiv and was a graduate of the University of Warsaw. He studied under the eminent Ukrainian historian Mykhailo Slabchenko and published widely on twetieth-century Ukrainian history. He was involved in underground publications, particularly the journal Krytyka, and helped with the preparation of underground Polish edition of John Armstrong's and Alexander Motyl's books on Ukrainian nationalism.</text>
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                <text>Janusz Radziejowski</text>
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                <text>This unique collection of nineteen essays is the product of a conference held in July 1988 at the University of London, UK. By addressing a diverse number of religious issues in both historical and contemporary contexts, the authors seek to "correct an imbalance" that has crept into the scholarship of religion in Ukraine and Russia. These essays consider the role of the church in various social, political and state settings and include the formation of modern Ukrainian religious culture. This book sheds light on the background of the religious revival in post-Soviet Ukraine and Russia. Essay titles include: The Formation of Modern Ukrainian Religious Culture The Spirituality of the Vyg Fathers The Authority of Holiness: Women Ascetics and Spiritual Elders The Greek Catholic Church in Nineteenth-century Galicia Printing the Bible in the Reign of Alexander I Christianity, the Service Ethic and Decembrist Thought The Role of the Orthodox Missionary in the Altai Theological Liberalism and Church Reform in Imperial Russia Alexander Kireev and Theological Controversy in the Russian Orthodox Church Leo Tolstoy, a Church Critic Influenced by Orthodox Thought The Church's Role in St. Petersburg, 1800-1914 The Church Schools and Seminaries in the Russian Revolution The Political Philosophy of the Russian Orthodox Episcopate in the Soviet Period and many others.&#13;
&#13;
Contributors include Bohdan R. Bociurkiw, Simon Dixon, Peter J.S. Duncan, Pal Kolsto, Dimitry Pospielovsky, John-Paul Himka, John Basil, Frank E. Sysyn, Brenda Meehan-Waters, and others. See Volodymyr the Great (Valdamar, Volodimer, Vladimir), Christianization of Ukraine, Saints Borys and Hlib, Bishop, Bible, and Apostle in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine.</text>
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                <text>Bohdan R. Bociurkiw, Simon Dixon, Peter J.S. Duncan, Pal Kolsto, Dimitry Pospielovsky, John-Paul Himka, John Basil, Frank E. Sysyn, Brenda Meehan-Waters, and others.</text>
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                <text>Bohdan R. Bociurkiw, Simon Dixon, Peter J.S. Duncan, Pal Kolsto, Dimitry Pospielovsky, John-Paul Himka, John Basil, Frank E. Sysyn, Brenda Meehan-Waters, and others.</text>
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                <text>Christian Social Ethics in Ukraine: The Legacy of Andrei Sheptytsky</text>
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                <text>In the first half of the twentieth century, Christianity in Europe faced an unprecedented range of social, economic, and political issues that challenged the very essence of the faith. In response to the rise of socialism, the struggle for political self-determination, and the competing totalitarianisms of Soviet communism and German fascism, some of Europe's finest theological minds sought to interpret the social message of the gospel in order to promote a specifically Christian understanding of ideals such as justice, liberty, and democratization. Andrei Sheptytsky (1865–1944), who headed the Ukrainian Catholic Church in Galicia for almost half a century, was not only an outstanding ecclesiastical, cultural, and civic leader, but also a thinker and writer of distinction. Grappling with the social and political problems that beset his religious community, Sheptytsky applied key principles of Christian social ethics to such issues as patriotism, inter-ethnic and church-state relations, the ideal of church unity, Soviet communism, nationalism, religious liberty, ideological atheism, and Nazism. Whether in pastoral letters that probed the Christian life through ethical reflection on social and political reality or in personal representations to such figures as Emperor Franz Joseph, Pope Pius X, Khrushchev, Hitler, and Stalin, Sheptytsky promoted a vision of human life that was grounded in the practical wisdom of both Eastern and Western Christendom. Andrii Krawchuk offers the first comprehensive scholarly study of this complex sphere of Metropolitan Sheptytsky's thought and activity. This pioneering analysis of how Christian moral teaching was applied within an East European context breaks new ground in our understanding of the churches that survived Soviet persecution. With meticulous attention to the facts behind the myth, Krawchuk draws on rigorous research in many sources, including extensive work in the newly opened archives of Ukraine. The result is an engaging interpretation of a legacy that has left its distinctive mark on twentieth-century Christian social thought.</text>
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                <text>Krawchuk, Andrii</text>
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                <text>CIUS Press, Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky Institute of Eastern Christian Studies, and The Basilian Press</text>
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                <text>Kravchuk, Andrii</text>
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                <text>A description of the construction, history, and use of the Ukrainian hammer dulcimer in Canada. This volume appears in the Canadian Series in Ukrainian Ethnology, co-published with the Huculak Chair of Ukrainian Culture and Ethnography at the University of Alberta. See Choral Music, Folks songs, Carols, and Ballad in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine.</text>
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                <text>The book The Emergence of Ukraine: Self-Determination, Occupation, and War in Ukraine, 1917–1922, is a collection of articles by several prominent historians from Austria, Germany, Poland, Ukraine, and Russia who undertook a detailed study of the formation of the independent Ukrainian state in 1918 and, in particular, of the occupation of Ukraine by the Central Powers in the final year of the First World War. A slightly condensed version of the German-language Die Ukraine zwischen Selbstbestimmung und Fremdherrschaft 1917–1922 (Graz, 2011), this book provides, on the one hand, a systematic outline of events in Ukraine during one of the most complex periods of twentieth-century European history, when the Austro-Hungarian and Russian empires collapsed at the end of the Great War and new independent nation-states emerged in Central and Eastern Europe. On the other hand, several chapters of this book provide detailed studies of specific aspects of the occupation of Ukraine by German and Austro-Hungarian troops following the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, signed on 9 February 1918 between the Central Powers and the Ukrainian People’s Republic. For the first time, these chapters offer English-speaking readers a wealth of hitherto unknown historical information based on thorough research and evaluation of documents from military archives in Vienna, Freiburg, Berlin, Munich, and Stuttgart.&#13;
&#13;
The first section of the book deals with military aspects of the German and Austro-Hungarian conquest of Ukraine in 1918, the suppression of uprisings, occupation, and retreat; it also discusses the administration of occupied territory, the economic utilization of the country, the occupying powers’ relations with the Ukrainian government, and the internal Ukrainian perspective on the occupation. The second section details developments in Ukraine between 1917 and 1922. The third section deals with the Central Powers’ policies toward Eastern Europe in general and Ukraine in particular, while the fourth and final section is an analysis of the international context of Ukraine’s efforts to establish a state during this period. This book is an essential resource for anyone interested in the history of the First World War and the modern history of Central and Eastern Europe.</text>
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                <text>Michael Moser's New Contributions to the History of the Ukrainian Language is a collection of scholarly essays that examine the development of Ukrainian from its beginnings to the present. In 1863 the imperial Russian minister of the interior, Petr Valuev, issued a directive according to which Ukrainian is "a language that did not, does not, and cannot exist," but time has not borne out his verdict. As these collected essays demonstrate, Ukrainian is a language with an intriguing past, present, and future. Contrary to widespread belief, its historical roots are as deep as those of any other Slavic language. The development of the Ukrainian language, like any other, has been a complex interplay of autochthonous factors and external influences. Moser discusses selected aspects of the history of Ukrainian-Church Slavonic, Ukrainian-Polish, and Ukrainian-Russian language contacts as reflected in Ukrainian written sources. He shows that the elaboration of Modern Standard Ukrainian was the result of intricate efforts of codification carried out under specific historical circumstances. The essays address specific problems of the history of the Ukrainian language in Galicia, Transcarpathia, and North America and discuss the impact of government policy on the more recent history of the Ukrainian language.</text>
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                <text>Indeks ukraïnsʹkoï katolytskoï periodyky Halychyny : 1871&lt;span class="st"&gt;–&lt;/span&gt;1942&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;INDEX to the Greek Catholic Реrіоdісаl Literature of Ukraine, 1871&lt;span class="st"&gt;–&lt;/span&gt;1942</text>
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                <text>The present index is an attempt to contribute to the renewal of religious scholarship in Ukraine. With more than 8,000 entries and cross-references, it presents the collective output of nineteen Ukrainian Grecko Catholic journals and almanachs over a virtually uninterrupted 70-year period leading up to the abolitions occasioned by Soviet rule. For the study of most aspects of religious life in Ukraine in this period, this resource will be an indispensable reference tool. The primary thematic groups presented here as chapters include: theology and philosophy, Bibilical studies, church history, liturgical and ritual matters, pastoral theology, catechetics and evangelization, homilies and homiletics, ecumenical and interconfessional issues and biographical notes. In addition to the thematic presentation of the material in chronological order, the nominal and geographical indices will facilitate the use of this reference work.&lt;br /&gt;This publication was made possible through the generous financial support of Renovabis, a foundation of the Catholic Episcopate of Germany, by the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada and by additional support from the L'viv Theological Academy.</text>
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Co-published with the Friends of Ukrainian Village Society, with support from the Alberta Ukrainian Commemorative Society. See Ukrainians and Alberta in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine.</text>
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                <text>The book Ukrainian-Jewish Relations in Historical Perspective is a rich and stimulating collection of twenty-three papers from the 1983 conference on Ukrainian-Jewish relations held at McMaster University, Canada. The essays in this unique volume reflect the dynamic and often controversial nature of the conference and cover the period from the seventh century to the present day, both in Eastern Europe and Canada. Essays include:&#13;
&#13;
    Pre-Ashkenazic Jews of Eastern Europe&#13;
    Jewish Participation in the Settlement of Ukraine in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries&#13;
    The Cossack Insurrections in Jewish-Ukrainian Relations&#13;
    The Jewish Factor in the Khmelnytsky Uprising&#13;
    The Sion-Osnova Controversy&#13;
    Jewish-Ukrainian Relations in Transcarpathia&#13;
    The Dilemmas of Jewish National Autonomism&#13;
    Jewish-Ukrainian Political Relations in Imperial Russia, 1900–1917&#13;
    Ukrainian-Jewish Relations in the Interwar Period&#13;
    The Jewish Theme in 19th and early 20th century Ukrainian Literature&#13;
    Soviet Ukrainian Translations in Yiddish Literature&#13;
    Jewish and Ukrainian Women&#13;
    Jewish-Ukrainian Relations in Western Ukraine During the Holocaust&#13;
    Ukrainian-Jewish Relations in Canada &#13;
&#13;
Contributors are noted Israeli and North American scholars including Omeljan Pritsak, Jaroslaw Pelenski, George Grabowicz, Frank E. Sysyn, John-Paul Himka, Alexander Baran, Jonathan Frankel, Israel Bartal, Moshe Mishkinsky, Mattityahu Minc, Zvi Gitelman, and many others.</text>
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                <text>Famine in Ukraine 1932–1933</text>
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                <text>Holodomor (Famine in Ukraine)</text>
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                <text>The Soviet Man-made famine of 1932–3 in Ukraine claimed the lives of millions of people, yet until recently it has remained veiled in obscurity. This pioneering volume, which appeared before the publication of Robert Conquest's Harvest of Sorrow and the establishment of the US Congressional Committee on the Famine, was one of the first scholarly efforts to analyze the famine. Chapters include: The Man-Made Famine of 1933 in Soviet Ukraine; The Man-Made Famine of 1932–1933 and Collectivization in Soviet Ukraine; Ukraine's Demographic Losses 1921–1938; The Famine of 1933: A survey of the Sources, Making the News Fit to Print: Walter Duranty, the New York Times and the Ukrainian Famine of 1933; Russian Mensheviks and the Famine of 1933; Blind Eye to Murder: Britain, the United States and the Ukrainian Famine of 1933; The Impact of the Man-made Famine on the Structure of Ukrainian Society; The Famine of 1921–1923: A Model for 1932–1933?; Conceptualizations of Genocide and Ethnocide.&#13;
&#13;
This collection of ten essays explores the causes of the famine, the scope of population loss, sources of information about the event, the impact of the famine on Ukrainian society, and the Western response. 2003 marked the 70th anniversary commemorating the famine. With regards to the renewed interest in the Walter Duranty controversy, an excellent 28-page article "Making the News Fit to Print: Walter Duranty, the New York Times and the Ukrainian Famine of 1933" by Marco Carynnyk appears in Famine in Ukraine, 1932–1933. Based on thorough documentary analysis, this article brilliantly exposes Walter Duranty conscious attempts to cover up the Man-made Famine in Ukraine of 1932–1933.&#13;
&#13;
Contributors include James Mace, Marco Carynnyk, Andre Liebich, Wsewolod W. Isajiw, Frank Chalk, Kurt Jonassohn, Bohdan Krawchenko, Roman Serbyn, and others. See Famine-Genocide of 1932–3 in the Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine.</text>
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                <text> Serbyn, Roman; Krawchenko, Bohdan</text>
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                <text>Essays in Modern Ukrainian History</text>
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                <text>A collection of twenty-three essays by Ivan L. Rudnytsky, a leading historian of modern Ukraine noted for his original interpretation of key issues in modern Ukrainian history.&#13;
&#13;
Essay titles include:&#13;
&#13;
    The Role of Ukraine in Modern History&#13;
    Ukraine Between East and West&#13;
    Observations on the Problem of "Historical" and "Non-Historical" Nations&#13;
    Pereiaslav: History and Myth&#13;
    Trends in Ukrainian Political Thought Intellectual&#13;
    Origins of Modern Ukraine Polish-Ukrainian Relations: The Burden of History&#13;
    Ukrainian-Jewish Relations&#13;
    Hipolit Vladimir Terlecki&#13;
    Carpatho-Ukraine: A People in Search of Their Identity&#13;
    Michal Czajkowski's Cossack Project During the Crimean War&#13;
    Ukrainians in Galicia under Austrian Rule&#13;
    Drahomanov as Political Theorist&#13;
    The First Ukrainian Political Program: Mykhailo Drahomanov's "Introduction" to Hromada&#13;
    Ukrainian National Movement on the Eve of the First World War&#13;
    Volodymyr Vynnychenko's Ideas in the Light of His Political Writings&#13;
    Viachyslav Lypynsky: Statesman, Historian, and Political Thinker&#13;
    Soviet Ukraine in Historical Perspective &#13;
&#13;
and many others. </text>
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                <text>Rudnytsky, Ivan L. (Ivan Lysiak)</text>
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        <name>Pereiaslav History and Myth</name>
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                <text>Ukrainians of the Eastern Diaspora : an Atlas</text>
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                <text>The atlas Ukrainians of the Eastern Diaspora is the first such publication concerning Ukrainians living outside their ethnic territory and scattered throughout the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union during the course of the last century. The Soviet census of 1989 enumerated more that 6.8 million Ukrainians outside Ukraine in the republics of the former Soviet Union alone. In addition, at least two million Ukrainians, according to official statistical data, reside in various countries of Europe, the Americas, and even Australia. They constitute the so-called "diaspora," a term that has become ever more current to denote the dispersal of Ukrainians beyond their historical homeland. The "Eastern Ukrainian diaspora" refers to the dispersion of Ukrainians on the territory of the former USSR outside Ukraine.&#13;
&#13;
The maps of the atlas are based on the official censuses of 1897, 1926, 1959, 1970, 1979, and 1989. The principle of defining nationality in terms of self-identification was the one used by Soviet census takers. However, under a totalitarian regime, these censuses did not always establish the true numbers of national groups. Multi-faceted programs of research and analysis are required to refine Soviet census data in order to determine the ethnic composition of the former USSR more accurately. See Ukrainians: World Distribution map in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine.</text>
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                <text>VSEVOLOD NAULKO&#13;
IHOR VYNNYCHENKO&#13;
ROSTYSLAV SOSSA&#13;
&#13;
Ttranslated by Serge Cipko&#13;
and Myroslav Yurkevich</text>
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&#13;
    John-Paul Himka: Sheptyts'kyi and the Ukrainian National Movement before 1914 &#13;
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    Athanasius B. Pekar: Sheptyts'kyi and the Carpatho-Ruthenians in the United States&#13;
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    Roman Waschuk: The Symbol of Sheptyts'kyi in Soviet Ideology &#13;
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    Michael Hrynchyshyn: Western Historiography and Future Research &#13;
&#13;
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The introduction, "The Chuch between East and West: The Context of Sheptyts'kyi's Thought," was written by leading church historian Jaroslav Pelikan.</text>
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Proceedings of a 1977 conference discussing the relationship between multiculturalism and Québécois separatism and illustrating the Ukrainian contribution to the national-unity debate. Contributors include Bohdan Bociurkiw, Camille Laurin, Ivan Myhul, Keith Spicer, Walter Tarnopolsky, and others. See Ukrainians and Alberta in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine.&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt;</text>
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;This collection of eight essays provides a detailed examination of the wartime experience of Canada's Ukrainian community. Chapters include: The Internment of Ukrainians in Canada The Enemy Aliens and the Canadian General Election of 1917 The Ukrainian Image: Loyal Citizen or Disloyal Alien Ukrainian Canadians and the Wartime Economy Ethnic and Class Tensions in Canada, 1918-20: Anglo-Canadians and the Alien Worker Aliens in Britain and the Empire During the First World War Ukrainian Canadian Response to the Paris Peace Conference, 1919 Ukrainian Diplomatic Representation in Canada, 1920-3 Contributors include Peter Melnycky, John Herd Thompson, Frances Swyripa, Nadia O.M. Kazymyra, Oleh W. Gerus, Donald Avery, David Saunders, and Andrij Makuch. See Ukrainians and Alberta in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine.&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt;</text>
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        <name>Great War</name>
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Ukraine's attainment of political independence since 1991 has focused world attention on relations between Ukraine and Russia, the two most powerful successor states to the USSR. This collection of essays by eminent specialists provides a reliable and detailed guide to the subject, examining the historical, political, cultural, religious, economic, and demographic aspects of Ukrainian-Russian relations.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt;</text>
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                <text>Omeljan Pritsak, Jaroslaw Pelenski, Edward L. Keenan, Hans-Joachim Torke, Marc Raeff, Edgar Hosch, Martha Bohachevsky-Chomiak, John A. Armstrong, John S. Reshetar Jr., Yaroslav Bilinsky, James Cracraft, George G. Grabowicz, Bohdan R. Bociurkiw, Ralph S. Clem, Peter Woroby, Nicholas V. Riasanovsky, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Jaroslaw Pelenski</text>
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        <name>Eastern Europe</name>
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        <name>Political Relations</name>
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        <name>Post-Soviet States</name>
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      <tag tagId="1819">
        <name>Ralph S. Clem</name>
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        <name>Russia</name>
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      <tag tagId="160">
        <name>Ukraine</name>
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                <text>&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;The twenty-three essays in this volume address various aspects of the codes, archetypes, and symbols that recur in Ukrainian-Canadian material culture, art, music, dance, and more. Chapters include: Endurance, Disappearance and Adaptation: Ukrainian Material Culture in Canada Museums and Ukrainian Canadian Material Culture Collecting Material Culture: Alberta's Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village Ethnicity in the Works of Ukrainian Canadian Artists The Relevance of Ethnicity to the Artist's Work: Personal Perspectives Artists and Art Critics on the Relevance of Ethnicity to Art The Evolution of Ukrainian Dance in Canada Dance Interpretation and Performance Symbols and Ukrainian Canadian Identity: Their Meaning and Significance Ukrainian Cultural and Political Symbols in Canada: An Anthropological Selection Cultural Exchanges with Soviet Ukraine Cultural Vision and the Fulfillment of Visible Symbols Political Dimension of Ukrainian Canadian Culture and many more. Contributors include Peter Shostak, Natalka Husar, Jaroslav Rozumnyj, Robert Klymasz, Jars Balan, Bohdan Krawchenko, Irka Balan, Lusia Pavlychenko, Alexandra Pritz, Isydor Hlynka, Wsevolod W. Isajiw, Lydia Palij, and many others. See&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Ukrainians and Alberta in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;</text>
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Twelve essays provide a portrait of Ukrainian Canadians analyzing the various ways in which the Ukrainian population has changed over several decades. Contributors include Wsevolod W. Isajiw, Olga Kuplowska, Jean E. Wolowyna, Charles B. Keely, Ivan Myhul, Michael Isaacs, William Darcovich, and many others. See Ukrainians and Alberta in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine.&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt;</text>
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                <text>This volume contains the proceedings of the first conference in Canada on research into Ukrainian-language education. Eighteen articles examine the teaching of Ukrainian in partial-immersion classrooms in Canada, focusing on the Ukrainian-English classrooms in Edmonton. Chapters include: Literary Ukrainian &lt;em&gt;and Its Dialects English Calques in Canadian Ukrainian Ukrainian-Language Acquisition in the Immersion Classroom Form-Classes (Parts-of-Speech) and Their Frequency in Canadian Children's Ukrainian Language and Canadian Multiculturalism Measures of Ukrainian Classroom Verbal Processes and Products Story Theatre and Ukrainian-Language Learning Television: A Tool for Ukrainian-Language Acquisition Evaluation of the Ukrainian&lt;/em&gt;&lt;em&gt; Bilingua&lt;/em&gt;&lt;em&gt;l&lt;/em&gt;&lt;em&gt; Programme in the Edmonton Catholic School District The Teacher in Edmonton's Ukrainian Bilingual Programme Parental Expectations of the Ukrainian Bilingual Programme Language Behaviour in the Ukrainian Home The NOL Study: Implications for Ukrainian-Language Teaching The Effects of&lt;/em&gt;&lt;em&gt; Intermarriage on Bilingual Education Among Ukrainians in Canada The Politics of Ukrainian Bilingual Education in Alberta Cultural Content in the Ukrainian-Language Classroom Future Directions for Ukrainian-Language Education Contributors include Natalia Pylypiuk, Wsevolod Isajiw, Nicolae Pavliuc, Andrij Hornjatkevyc, Oksanna A. Wynnyckyj, Jim Cummins, Patricia Sembaliuk, Eugene Ewanyshyn, Anna Eliuk, Olga M. Kuplowska, Donald J. Dawson, Roman Chumak, and many others.&lt;/em&gt;</text>
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                <text>&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;A comprehensive, interdisciplinary examination of the life of the first Ukrainian immigrants. The volume consists of eight parts. It begins with a prologue by Roman Onufrijchuk that sets the stage for understanding the difficult process of cultural transmission and accomodation, made even more difficult for the first Ukrainian settlers, who were from the peasant stratum as well as pioneers. It ends with a more theoretical epilogue by Ian H. Angus that points up the unique significance of ethnocultural communities in rescuing Canadian identity from the universalizing grip of homogenizing cultures like that of the United States. In between, the volume explores (in the second part) the historical conditions in western Ukraine and western Canada at the turn of the century, the overall nature of the rural Ukrainian bloc settlement in east central Alberta (the largest in Canada), and the contrast between the cluster village in Ukraine and the railroad village in the West. In this part, John-Paul Himka presents the hypothesis tested indirectly by subsequent presentations: "Ukrainian immigrants in Canada were at first not only culturally more traditional/backward than most Canadians but also more traditional/backward than their contemporaries in western Ukraine." The next four parts on material culture, the life of women, customs and beliefs, and cultural institutions and organizations in the new world could be said to constitute the heart of the volume. The life of the first immigrants is analyzed in detail in terms of the problems of shelter, agricultural technology, the status and responsibilities of women, the endurance of customs and beliefs, and the evolution of institutions and organizations that were similar to, yet distinct from, those in the Old Country. The analysis is as strong as the field work on which it depends, and there is no doubt a lesson here for all ethnocultural groups: research in the field should begin early, while most of the immigrant generation is still alive. The seventh part on the "open-air" museum may be seen as the applied part of the conference and is, of course, most directly relevant to the needs and concerns of the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village. As a type, the village has numerous models in other countries, and its problems, like its accomplishments, are in some respects unique. Contributors include Orest T. Martynowych, Frances Swyripa, Peter Melnycky, Marie Lesoway, Andrij Makuch, Kathleen Conzen, James Fitch, Vivian Olender, Sandra Thompson, Bohdan Medwidsky, Robert Klymasz, Roman Onufrijchuk, T.D. Regehr, Matti Kaups, and others. Published in association with Historic Sites Services, Alberta Culture. See Ukrainians and Alberta in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</text>
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                <text>&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;Twelve path-breaking essays define the territory for a Canadian social philosophy of ethnicity. They address the major issues of immigration, discrimination, consumerism, government policy, ethics, gender, media, and political strategy. From a variety of perspectives, the authors enter a dialogue that illuminates the central role of ethnicity in Canadian society. This book lays the groundwork for an independent political philosophy of ethnicity that can confront economic and state pressures. Contributors include Myrna Kostash, Leslie Armour, Roman Onufrijchuk, John O'Neill, Alkis Kontos, José Huertas-Jourda, Manoly R. Lupul, Ato Sekyi-Otu, and others. See Ukrainians and Alberta in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;</text>
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                <text>&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;This first case study of how the East European peasantry was drawn into national politics focuses on the Ukrainians of Galicia (1772–1914). On the basis of first-hand testimony by peasants and rural notables, it demonstrates that the peasants' political consciousness was forged by serfdom, reforms initiated by the state, and the penetration of a money economy.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;This book breaks new ground on related issues, including the connection between class and national consciouness, the reasons for a sharp exacerbation of the peasantry's antagonism toward Jews, the new role of generational differences in the village, and the place of rural women in the national movement.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;Winner of the 1989 Antonovych Foundation History Prize Co-published with the Macmillan Press and St. Martin's Press. See Bukovyna, Carpathian Mountains, Principality of Galicia-Volhynia, Dilo, and Boyars in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</text>
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Russian occupation of Ukraine under the tsarist and communist regimes exerted a decisive influence on the development of Ukrainian economics. The present collection of essays, written over a ten-year period, explores some of the pertinent issues. The 1917 Revolution can be taken as a logical dividing point for comparing the impact of the two different political and economic systems on the performance of Ukraine's economy and the welfare of its population. It appears that the effect of the Soviet regime was in general harmful to Ukraine. Relative to other Soviet republics, its economic growth was one of the lowest, and income per capita deteriorated. Despite the inferior performance of the Ukrainian economy, the Soviet regime continued year in and year out the unrequited transfer of part of Ukraine's national income to other regions of the USSR in greater amounts that its tsarist predecessor. Geopolitical considerations were the primary motivation. Analysis of most of the period since World War II suggests that, in order to achieve Soviet political and military goals, Ukrainian authorities had to be left without any real decision-making power, despite official propaganda to the contrary. In order to integrate Ukraine into the Russian Empire / USSR, it was not enough to control its economy completely: its intellectual base had to be destroyed as well. Before 1917, the imperial establishment tended to appropriate the contributions of Ukrainian scholars to economics — a practice that continued under the Soviets. The overall conclusion of this study is that Moscow's administration of the Ukrainian economy, regardless of the system in place, was detrimental to its performance and to the population's welfare, and dangerous to the survival of the Ukrainian nation itself. See Industry, Dolyna oil field, and Dnieper Hydroelectric Station in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine.&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt;</text>
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                <text>Iwan S. Koropeckyj</text>
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        <name>Dolyna Oil Field</name>
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        <name>economic exploitation</name>
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        <name>Economic Growth</name>
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        <name>Economics</name>
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        <name>Encyclopedia of Ukraine</name>
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        <name>Imperial Russia</name>
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                <text>Ukraine: From Chernobyl' to Sovereignty: A Collection of Interviews</text>
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;This collection of fifteen stimulating interviews with well-known figures and academics is relevant. It includes discussions with Adam Michnik, Vitalii Karpenko, Pavlo Movchan, Mykola Riabchuk, Yurii Pokalchuk, Ivan Drach, Anatolii Pohribnyi, Stanislav Kulchytskyi, Rostyslav Bratun, Roman Szporluk, Valerii Tishkov, Dmytro Pavlychko, Aleksandr Tsipko, Yurii Risovannyi, Stanislav Hurenko and Oleksandr Burakovskyi who discuss Ukraine's central political concerns as it emerged from Soviet rule after 1991. Subjects include: The Democratization Process in Ukraine Filling in the Blank Spots in Ukrainian History The Beginnings of Rukh Western Ukraine Ukrainian-Jewish Relations Chernobyl Ukraine and Poland Language Culture, and the Search for a Ukrainian Hero Ukrainian Politics Interviewers include Roman Solchanyk, David Marples, and Chrystia Freeland. This title also includes a foreword by the noted historian Norman Stone and a helpful name index. See Ukrainians in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine.&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt;</text>
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                <text> Roman Solchanyk</text>
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