Victims of Soviet Terror: The Story of the Memorial Movement

Author:   Nanci D. Adler ,  Jonathan Sanders
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
ISBN:  

9780275945022


Pages:   200
Publication Date:   30 July 1993
Recommended Age:   From 7 to 17 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Victims of Soviet Terror: The Story of the Memorial Movement


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Overview

Memorial began as a group of dissidents who secretly met to exchange stories of Stalinist repression, make contacts, and collect whatever records they could obtain to establish historical truths about Soviet totalitarianism. In Victims of Soviet Terror, Nanci Adler records how Memorial grew from a suspect organization to a powerful human rights movement that collects and disseminates information about Stalinism's crimes and has established a monument to the millions persecuted by the K.G.B. across from the Lubyanka, the shrine of totalitarianism. Using Memorial's own documents, interviews with its founders and supporters, and Soviet and Western news accounts, Adler examines Memorial's functions as a historical society and political force, particularly its efforts to posthymously try Stalin and Stalinist leaders for crimes against the Soviet people.

Full Product Details

Author:   Nanci D. Adler ,  Jonathan Sanders
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Imprint:   Praeger Publishers Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.510kg
ISBN:  

9780275945022


ISBN 10:   0275945022
Pages:   200
Publication Date:   30 July 1993
Recommended Age:   From 7 to 17 years
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

Memorial, an organization with chapters spanning the former Soviet republics, seeks to honor the victims of Stalinism, aid remaining survivors, and preserve the record of Stalinist suffering and dissidence through research centers and programs. A Memorial monument now stands before the former KGB headquarters in Moscow. Adler, a member of the Geneva Institute on Psychiatry and Amsterdam's Second World Center, describes the rise of Memorial from a handful of citizens taking donations in 1987 to a semiofficially sanctioned organization in 1990. She reviews pertinent Soviet history and examines current aims of the organization. Through the group's documents, news articles, and interviews, the book reveals the role and influence of Memorial, particularly in political activities. This...study is clearly written and offers scholars of Stalinism a solid briefing of this movement. -Library Journal The future role of Memorial in a democratic Russia is far from clear, but surely no less vital than its efforts in the past. Already certain small but vocal groups in Russia call for a return to the efficiency and orderliness of Soviet (read: Stalinist) regime. Books like Adler's are important in countering this version of revisionist history by describing the horrors of the Stalinist period and perhaps even more by recounting the harassment, arrests, and insults endured by even the modest dissidents of the Memorial group during the liberal Gorbachev period. Adler's book should be read with interest by political scientists, journalists, and anyone interested in recent Russian history. -Journal of Baltic Studies ?Memorial, an organization with chapters spanning the former Soviet republics, seeks to honor the victims of Stalinism, aid remaining survivors, and preserve the record of Stalinist suffering and dissidence through research centers and programs. A Memorial monument now stands before the former KGB headquarters in Moscow. Adler, a member of the Geneva Institute on Psychiatry and Amsterdam's Second World Center, describes the rise of Memorial from a handful of citizens taking donations in 1987 to a semiofficially sanctioned organization in 1990. She reviews pertinent Soviet history and examines current aims of the organization. Through the group's documents, news articles, and interviews, the book reveals the role and influence of Memorial, particularly in political activities. This...study is clearly written and offers scholars of Stalinism a solid briefing of this movement.?-Library Journal ?The future role of Memorial in a democratic Russia is far from clear, but surely no less vital than its efforts in the past. Already certain small but vocal groups in Russia call for a return to the efficiency and orderliness of Soviet (read: Stalinist) regime. Books like Adler's are important in countering this version of revisionist history by describing the horrors of the Stalinist period and perhaps even more by recounting the harassment, arrests, and insults endured by even the modest dissidents of the Memorial group during the liberal Gorbachev period. Adler's book should be read with interest by political scientists, journalists, and anyone interested in recent Russian history.?-Journal of Baltic Studies


?Memorial, an organization with chapters spanning the former Soviet republics, seeks to honor the victims of Stalinism, aid remaining survivors, and preserve the record of Stalinist suffering and dissidence through research centers and programs. A Memorial monument now stands before the former KGB headquarters in Moscow. Adler, a member of the Geneva Institute on Psychiatry and Amsterdam's Second World Center, describes the rise of Memorial from a handful of citizens taking donations in 1987 to a semiofficially sanctioned organization in 1990. She reviews pertinent Soviet history and examines current aims of the organization. Through the group's documents, news articles, and interviews, the book reveals the role and influence of Memorial, particularly in political activities. This...study is clearly written and offers scholars of Stalinism a solid briefing of this movement.?-Library Journal


Author Information

NANCI D. ADLER a graduate of Columbia University and the University of Amsterdam (the Netherlands), is with the Geneva Initiative on Psychiatry and the Second World Center in Amsterdam. She is a contributor to numerous journals.

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