World War II and Historical Memory in Ukraine: A Selective Bibliography, compiled and edited by Vladyslav Hrynevych and Nazariy Hutsul.
The document is mixed Ukrainian/English

Attitudes of Ukrainians to World War II: A National Survey, 2009

Session 1. Models of National Memory of World War II

Richard Ned LebowDartmouth College (USA); London School of Economics and Political Science (UK)
Rethinking the Past, Remaking the Future.
 
Rafal WnukLublin Institute of Public Memory (Lublin, Poland)
Polish Historical Memory of World War II with a Special Focus on the Period after 1989.
 
Session 3. Politics of Memory in Ukraine
Aiste Bertulytye-ZhikiavichiuneLithuanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Vilnius, Lithuania)
Armed Anti-Soviet Resistance in Lithuania and Western Ukraine: Why the War in Europe Did Not end in 1945
 
Oleksandr MelnykDepartment of History, University of Toronto (Toronto, Canada)
Learning Like a State: Archives, Repression, and the Politics of Historical Knowledge in Ukraine, 1942-1944.
 
Session 4. Theoretical and Methodological Approaches to Comparative Studies on Political Memory: Ukraine and the Central and Eastern European Region
Andrej Findor
Barbara Lasticova
Comenius University (Bratislava, Slovakia)
Politics of Memory and Identity: How (Not) to Study Museum Exhibitions
 
Heiko PaaboUniversity of Tartu (Estonia)
Analysis of national master narratives in the post-imperial space: Ukraine vs. Russia.
 
Per Anders RudlingUniversity of Alberta (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada)
The Shukhevych Cult in Ukraine: Myth Making with Complications
 
Alexandra GoujonUniversity of Bourgogne (Dijon, France)
Memorial Narratives of WWII Partisans and Genocide in Belarus
 
Session 5 Models of Collective and Individual Memory
Tetiana PastushenkoInstitute of the History of Ukraine, NASU (Kyiv, Ukraine)
Memory of the German Occupation of Ukraine, 1941-1944: Evidence from the Countryside
 
Marta DyczokUniversity of Western Ontario (London, Ontario, Ñanada)
Re-examining the World War II Ukrainian Refugee Experience
 
Oksana TovaryanskaNational University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy (Kyiv, Ukraine)
Peculiarities of Collective Memory Formation of the Former Soldiers of Division ‘Galicia’
 
Olesya KhromeychukSchool of Slavonic and East European Studies, University College London (London, England, United Kingdom)
The Re-construction of WWII Memory and its Contemporary Political Framing: The Case of Ukrainian Surrendered Enemy Personnel.
 
Iroida WynnyckyjUkrainian Canadian Research and Documentation Center (UCRDC) (Toronto, Canada)
How World War II Affected the Lives of Ukrainian Women: An Oral History
 
Kate BrownUniversity of Maryland-Baltimore County (Baltimore, Maryland)
Atomic Forgetting and the Tragedy of Chornobyl
 
Guido HausmannUniversity of Freiburg (Freiburg, Germany)
A Different Version of the War: Memory of World War II of the Residents of a Burned Village in the Kyiv Region
 
Session 6. Culture and the Formation of Memory
Mykola SorokaCanadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies (CIUS) University of Alberta (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada)
Memory of World War II in Ukrainian Immigrant Literature
 
Bohdan KlidCanadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies (CIUS) University of Alberta (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada)
Historical Memory of World War II and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) in Ukrainian Rock and Hip Hop Music.
 
Sofia DyakCenter for Urban History of East Central Europe (Lviv, Ukraine)
The Second World War in Lviv Cityscape: Creating the Cornerstone for the City’s Postwar Identity
 
Bohdan KlidCanadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies (CIUS) University of Alberta (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada)
Historical Memory of World War II and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) in Ukrainian Rock and Hip Hop Music.
 
Session 7. Genocide, Holocaust and Inter-ethnic Conflicts
Hulnara BekirovaCrimean State Industrial-Pedagogic Institute
The Deportation of 1944 in the Historical Memory of the Crimean Tatars.
 
Ihor IllyushynKyiv Institute Slavonic University (Kyiv, Ukraine)
The Ukrainian-Polish Nationality Conflict in Public Consciousness and Collective Memory: The Humane Stereotypes and The Historical Facts.
 
Jared McBrideUniversity of California-Los Angeles (Los Angeles, California, USA)
’Through an Ethnic Lens, Darkly’: The Massacre at Malyn, July 1943.
 
Maksym GonRivne State Humanitarian University (Rivne, Ukraine)
Memory of the Holocaust: Its Subjective Formation and Functionality in Ukraine.
 
Olena IvanovaV.N. Karazin Kharkiv National University (Kharkiv, Ukraine)
The Creation of Collective Memory About the Holocaust and National Identity.

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