20 results on '"HISTORY"'
Search Results
2. Galician Catholics into Soviet Orthodox: religion and postwar Ukraine †.
- Author
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David, Kathryn
- Subjects
- *
RUSSIA-Ukraine relations , *ORIENTAL rites (Catholic Church) , *UKRAINIANS , *UKRAINIAN national character , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY ,HISTORY of Western Ukraine ,HISTORY of Galicia - Abstract
While important work has been done on what it meant to become newly “Soviet” after 1917, or during the era of “High Stalinism,” it is less clear what it meant to become Soviet for the first time after World War II. For the residents of the new Soviet Baltics, each prewar state received its own republic. In the case of the existing Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic and Belarusian Soviet Socialist Republic, territories that had not experienced Soviet power or the war on the same timeline were put into existing republics and thus existing Soviet structures. How did this process work? For Western Ukraine, one event in this process was the formation of the 1946 Initiative Committee, a joint project of the Central Committee and the newly formed Plenipotentiary for the Matters of the Russian Orthodox Church that presided over a forced conversion of Uniates to the Russian Orthodox Church. This paper examines how the mass religious conversion of Uniates was part of the process of making Galicians into Soviet Ukrainians, a postwar renewal of Soviet nationalities policy. Yet this decision, much like 1917 or 1939, was imagined as only the beginning. Turning “disloyal” Galicians into Soviet Ukrainians was a project of both re-writing the separate histories of Galicia and Soviet Ukrainians to emphasize their unity and teaching Galicians to imagine themselves as Ukrainian in the Soviet sense. In contrast to a new Soviet order with an emphasis on the secular, Western Ukraine’s Sovietization was brought about through religious terms and an emphasis on Russian Orthodoxy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Radio Londra 1943-1945: Italian society at the microphones of the BBC.
- Author
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Biundo, Ester Lo
- Subjects
- *
RADIO broadcasting , *WAR propaganda , *WORLD War II , *CIVILIANS in war , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
Propaganda from the BBC directed at Italy during the Second World War played a dual role. The 'Radio Londra' programmes, on the one hand a propaganda tool of the British government and on the other moral support to many Italians, are part of the cultural heritage of the war. This article explores what topics and types of programme were broadcast during the period of the Allied occupation of Italy (1943-1945) in order to engage the support of different social categories, including ordinary men and women, soldiers, factory workers, former Fascists, and intellectuals. The first part analyses some of the programmes in order to determine their propaganda strategies, while the second part focuses on the letters sent by listeners in Italy to the BBC broadcaster Colonel Stevens. It will be seen how both the use of cultural stereotypes and the attention to the detail of daily life for Italian civilians contributed to the success of the programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Evangelical Global Engagement and the American State after World War II.
- Author
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SCHÄFER, AXEL R.
- Subjects
- *
EVANGELICALISM , *WORLD War II , *FOREIGN aid (American) , *CHRISTIAN missions , *MILITARY-industrial complex , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century - Abstract
The resurgence of American evangelicalism since the 1940s unfolded in conjunction with efforts by policymakers to instrumentalize religion for the assertion of empire. Missions and foreign aid are two key areas where these dynamics intersected. They show that evangelicals were both at home in the “American century” and deeply critical of global power. Rather than being a weakness, however, these tensions enabled the movement to become a crucial arbiter at a time when the country's new role was not yet firmly legitimized at home. In particular, evangelicalism helped reconcile isolationist, antistatist, and antimilitarist sentiments with hegemonic aspirations, the national security state, and the military–industrial complex. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The Effects of World War II Military Service: Evidence from Australia.
- Author
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Cousley, Alex, Siminski, Peter, and Ville, Simon
- Subjects
- *
WORLD War II , *MILITARY service , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
Outside of the United States, few studies have estimated the effects of World War II service. In Australia, general war-time conscription and minimal involvement in the Korean War led to large cohort differences in military service rates, which we use for identification. We find a small, temporary negative effect on employment and a substantial positive effect on post-school qualifications, but not at the university level. While service increased home ownership slightly, it greatly reduced outright home ownership, consistent with the incentives provided by veterans' housing benefits. We also find a positive effect on marriage, but only from 1971. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Redefining Wartime Chongqing: International capital of a global power in the making, 1938–46.
- Author
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CHANG, VINCENT K. L. and ZHOU, YONG
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL conflict , *POWER (Social sciences) , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *DIPLOMACY , *WORLD War II , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
This article examines the historical role and legacy of the foreign establishment in China's temporary capital Chongqing during the Chinese War of Resistance against Japan and the Second World War. This extraordinary episode, lasting from 1938 to 1946, ushered in a new era for China's foreign diplomacy and laid the foundation for its rise to world-power status. Placing Chongqing at the very heart of this epochal chapter in modern Chinese history, this article describes the major events, trends, and actors that directly or indirectly were instrumental to China's wartime transformation from a partitioned, de facto colony to a first-rate global power with a permanent seat among the ‘Big Five’. Seventy years after the end of the Second World War, this article presents fresh perspectives on a near-forgotten episode of China's war experience. Moving beyond the traditional typecasting of ‘Chungking’ as a primitive backwater in China's remote hinterland, this article reappraises wartime Chongqing as a major international centre at the spearhead of global change and as an important cradle of the modern power that China is today. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Informed Consent in Dentistry.
- Author
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Reid, Kevin I.
- Subjects
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INFORMED consent (Medical law) , *DENTAL laws & legislation , *PATIENTS' rights , *JEWS , *WORLD War II , *MEDICAL experimentation on humans , *ACTIONS & defenses (Law) , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY , *TEMPOROMANDIBULAR disorders , *COMMUNICATION , *DECISION making , *DENTAL care , *DENTAL ethics , *DENTIST-patient relationship , *DENTISTRY , *DISCUSSION , *DOCUMENTATION , *DENTAL fillings , *LEGAL liability , *MALPRACTICE , *DISCLOSURE , *PATIENT autonomy , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
The article discusses America's informed consent legal doctrine in relation to patients' rights and the legal aspects of dentistry in the U.S. as of 2017, and it mentions how World War II atrocities involving medical experimentation on Jews have influenced informed consent laws in places such as America. Several informed consent legal cases in the U.S. are assessed, including Schloendorff v. Society of New York Hospital and Canterbury v. Spence
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. “The (final) solution of the Gypsy-question:” continuities in discourses about Roma in Hungary, 1940s–1950s.
- Author
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Varsa, Eszter
- Subjects
- *
NAZI Germany, 1933-1945 , *ROMANIES , *HISTORY of socialism , *WORLD War II , *DISCOURSE analysis , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century ,HUNGARIAN history - Abstract
Although the repression and elimination of Roma from Hungarian society in the 1940s did not reach the same extent as in the German and Austrian part of the Third Reich, their characterization as lazy and work-shy, used to justify their persecution, was similar. This paper establishes the presence of racial hygienic discourse related to Roma during the late 1930s and the first half of the 1940s in Hungary, and traces its survival and influence on regional policy-making in the postwar period. It furthermore explores the transformation and adaptation of racism and eugenics to the socialist ideology of equality based on citizens’ participation in productive work in the early state socialist period, including the first Party declaration on the situation of Roma in Hungary in 1961. Specific attention is paid to the role of medical experts who discussed the “radical solution of the Gypsy-question” in the early 1940s and the immediate years following World War II. Reflecting on wider transformations of racism in the postcolonial and post-World War II period in Europe and North America, the paper contributes to scholarship that complicates the evaluation of the state socialist past, including the connection between medicine and politics in Cold War Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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9. HISTORICIZING CITIZENSHIP IN POST-WAR BRITAIN.
- Author
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GRANT, MATTHEW
- Subjects
- *
CITIZENSHIP , *HISTORY of nationalism , *WORLD War II , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century , *EMIGRATION & immigration ,20TH century British history - Abstract
Citizenship has been widely debated in post-war British history, yet historians discuss the concept in very different, and potentially contradictory, ways. In doing so, historians are largely following in the footsteps of post-war politicians, thinkers, and ordinary people, who showed that citizenship could – and did – mean very different things. The alternative ways of framing the concept can be usefully described as the three registers of citizenship. First, there are the political and legal definitions of what makes any individual a citizen. Secondly, there is the notion of belonging to a national community, an understanding of citizenship which highlights that legal status alone cannot guarantee an individual's ability to practise citizenship rights. Thirdly, there is the idea of citizenship as divided between ‘good’ or ‘active’ citizens, and ‘bad’ or ‘passive’ ones, a differential understanding of citizenship which has proved very influential in debates about British society. This article reviews these registers, and concludes by arguing that all three must be taken into account if we are to comprehend properly the nature and citizenship as both status and practice in post-war Britain. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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10. The Ambivalent State: Determining Guilt in the Post-World War II Soviet Union.
- Author
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EXELER, FRANZISKA
- Subjects
- *
COLLABORATIONISTS (Traitors) , *WORLD War II , *TREASON , *HISTORY of the police , *MAYORS , *RETRIBUTION , *HISTORY of capital punishment , *LENIENCY (Law) , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
The article focuses on the evolution of Soviet retribution against collaborators who worked under the Germans during the Second World War. It comments on how a lack of clarity on what constituted treacherous behavior during the war initially led to anyone who worked in German-overseen institutions being put to death, along with policemen, mayors, and village heads. It mentions after the winter of 1943-1944 punishment became less indiscriminate and started handing out more lenient sentences.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Rural Russia on the Edges of Authority: Bezvlastie in Wartime Riazan', November-December 1941.
- Author
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BERNSTEIN, SETH
- Subjects
- *
WORLD War II , *DRAFT (Military service) , *PRIVATIZATION , *COLLABORATIONISTS (Traitors) , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
The article focuses on collaboration of Russian citizens in Riazan and the town of Mikhailov in 1941 with German occupiers and how the rural Russian population showed little loyalty to either Russian or German powers. It comments on anti-Soviet sentiments among peasants driven partly by conscription of Russian youth and the reduction of the mandatory service age from 21 to 19. It talks about the privatization of property and grain after the Soviets fled the region and collaboration with Germans.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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12. The People's War: Ordinary People and Regime Strategies in a World of Extremes.
- Author
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DAVID-FOX, MICHAEL
- Subjects
- *
WORLD War II , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *PRICES , *PILLAGE , *GENOCIDE , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY ,WORLD War II Eastern Front - Abstract
The article focuses on four papers which examined aspects of motivation and behavior as part of successive regime changes on the Eastern Front during the Second World War. It states the papers closely examine material incentives and material calculations and their role in violence and the Holocaust. It talks about how low prices were used by the Soviet leadership to privilege urban populations over the peasantry. It talks about looted goods from Polish villages during ethnic cleaning operations.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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13. The Red Army in Yugoslavia, 1944-1945.
- Author
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Majstorović, Vojin
- Subjects
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WORLD War II , *RAPE as a weapon of war , *CIVILIANS in war , *PROPAGANDA , *MILITARY discipline , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY ,SOVIET military history - Abstract
This article discusses the Red Army’s behaviour in Yugoslavia in 1944 and 1945, focusing on the issue of rape. It explores the magnitude of the sexual violence that the Soviet troops perpetrated in the country by comparing it to their conduct in the countries which fought against the Soviet Union, arguing that the Red Army behaved with relative restraint in Yugoslavia. In order to explain the Soviet soldiers and officers’ behaviour there, the article focuses on the high command’s propaganda line about Yugoslavia, the army leadership’s disciplinary policies towards rapists and other criminals in the ranks, the frontline troops’ attitudes towards the Yugoslavs, the emergence of large number of stray soldiers behind the frontlines, and some Soviet soldiers’ tendency to abuse alcohol. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Citizenship, Cowardice, and Freedom of Conscience: British Pacifists in the Second World War.
- Author
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Kelly, Tobias
- Subjects
- *
CONSCIENTIOUS objection , *CONSCIENTIOUS objectors , *LIBERTY of conscience , *CITIZENSHIP , *PACIFISTS , *COWARDICE , *WORLD War II , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY ,WORLD War II & society - Abstract
Freedom of conscience is widely claimed as a central principle of liberal democracy, but what is conscience and how do we know what it looks like? Rather than treat conscience as a transcendent category, this paper examines claims of conscience as rooted in distinct cultural and political histories. I focus on debates about conscientious objection in Second World War Britain, and argue that, there, persuasive claims of conscience were widely associated with a form of “detached conviction.” Yet evidence of such “detached convictions” always verged on being interpreted as deliberate manipulation and calculation. More broadly, I argue that the protection of freedom of conscience is necessarily incomplete and unstable. The difficulties in recognizing individual conscience point to anxieties within liberal democracy. Not only strangers are suspect and mistrusted, but also those who claim to stand most strongly by the principles of liberal citizenship. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Chinese Residents of Burma as Refugees, Evacuees, and Returnees: The shared racial logic of territorialization in the regulation of wartime migration.
- Author
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CHEN, TINA MAI
- Subjects
- *
BURMESE Chinese , *REPATRIATION , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation , *REFUGEES , *WORLD War II , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY ,20TH century Asian history - Abstract
This article analyses how, at the time of the Japanese military expansion across Asia in the 1930s and 1940s, the category of ‘Burma Chinese’ and notions of ‘Chineseness’ acquired meaning through the movement across Chinese and Indian borders of residents of Burma identified as Chinese. Focusing on the terminology utilized by various reporting organizations to refer to evacuees, refugees or returnees, this article asks what we can learn from bureaucratic exchanges and practices of documentation about the wartime migration of Burma Chinese. I argue that a shared racial logic of territorialization operates across divergent sets of correspondence concerned with the repatriation of Burma Chinese to Burma. Multiple acts of iteration and practical implementation of categories naturalized this racial logic with respect to Burma Chinese in the latter half of the 1940s. Understanding how the work of repatriating Burma Chinese rested upon a shared racial logic is important because the regulation of Asian wartime migration was foundational to the emerging international refugee regime and post-Second World War world order. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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16. Financing Japan's World War II Occupation of Southeast Asia.
- Author
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Huff, Gregg and Majima, Shinobu
- Subjects
- *
MILITARY occupation , *WORLD War II , *PRICE inflation , *INTERNATIONAL economic relations , *TWENTIETH century , *ECONOMICS , *HISTORY , *INTERNATIONAL relations ,ECONOMIC conditions in Southeast Asia ,SOUTHEAST Asian history ,JAPANESE economic policy ,JAPANESE history, 1912-1945 - Abstract
This article analyzes how Japan financed its World War II occupation of Southeast Asia, the market-purchased transfer of resources to Japan, and the monetary and inflation consequences of Japanese policies. Occupation was financed principally by printing large quantities of money. While some Southeast Asian countries had high inflation, hyperinflation hardly occurred because of a sustained transactions demand for money and because of Japan's strong enforcement of monetary monopoly. Highly specialized Southeast Asian economies and loss of Japanese merchant shipping limited resource extraction. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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17. The Pretexts and Reasons for the Allied Invasion of Iran in 1941.
- Author
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Kozhanov, NikolayA.
- Subjects
- *
WORLD War II -- Historiography , *MILITARY supplies , *WORLD War II , *NAZI Germany, 1933-1945 -- Foreign relations , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY ,IRANIAN foreign relations ,BRITISH history ,WORLD War II campaigns ,GERMAN invasion of Soviet Union, 1941 ,PAHLAVI dynasty, 1925-1979 ,IRANIAN military history ,REIGN of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, Iran, 1941-1979 - Abstract
During the last 65 years, European, American and Russian historians have often tried to study the reasons which led to the Allied invasion of Iran on 25 August 1941. For a long period, the main obstacle was the limited access to official documentary sources. Gradually, British and Russian archives started to declassify their documents concerning the events of August 1941. That, in turn, caused a new wave of publications on this topic. Unfortunately, even with newly available sources, modern researchers were frequently unable to grasp the whole picture, emphasizing only one reason for the invasion or even exaggerating its importance. This paper attempts to analyze the most common explanations of the reasons for the occupation of Iran offered by different historians and try to find out which of these causes impelled the Allies to invade Iran. The research paid special attention to existing Russian primary and secondary sources on the issue which are less well known to English readers. Important information found in them allows events related to the Allied occupation of Iran in 1941 to be described from a relatively new angle. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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18. The experience of farm women during World War Two.
- Author
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Sayer, Karen
- Subjects
- *
RURAL women , *WOMEN farmers , *FARMHOUSES , *COUNTRY homes , *CIVILIAN evacuation , *WOMEN in war , *WORLD War II , *WOMEN'S institutes , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
The article discusses the experiences of British farm women during World War Two. Topics include the conditions and supply of farmhouses and cottages, articles by farmer Irene Megginson in the periodical "Farmer's Weekly," and the lack of electricity and running water on many farms. Also addressed are the responsibilities facing rural women as a result of the absence of men during the war, the report "Town Children Through Country Eyes" by the organization Women's Institute (WI), which discussed war evacuees, and the work of women in the organization Women's Voluntary Service (WVS).
- Published
- 2013
19. Terror in the Balkans: German Armies and Partisan Warfare.
- Author
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Tooley, T. Hunt
- Subjects
- *
WORLD War II , *COUNTERINSURGENCY , *NONFICTION , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY - Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Soviet Women on the Frontline in the Second World War.
- Author
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PENNINGTON, REINA
- Subjects
- *
WOMEN in war , *WORLD War II , *NONFICTION , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY - Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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