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Making Sense of War
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Table of Contents

List of Illustrations ix List of Tables xi Acknowledgments xiii Introduction: Making Sense of War 7 PART I: DELINEATING THE BODY POLITIC 41 One Myth and Power: The Making of a Postwar Elite 43 Two "Living Up to the Calling of a Communist": Purification of the Rank and File 82 PART II: DELINEATING THE BODY SOCIOETHNIC 127 Three Excising Evil 129 Four Memory of Excision, Excisionary Memory 191 PART III: THE MAKING OF A POSTWAR SOVIET NATION 237 Five Integral Nationalism in the Trial of War 239 Six Peasants to Soviets, Peasants to Ukrainians 298 Afterword: A Soviet World without Soviet Power, a Myth of War without War 364 Bibliography 387 Index 411

Promotional Information

I know no other book that systematically relates World War II and postwar Soviet experience to the whole of Soviet history. The book's originality and its exhaustive research make it truly interesting. Making Sense of War will be an important contribution to the field not only of Russian and Ukrainian history but of European history in general. In a word, this is a tour de force of new scholarship on the Soviet Union. -- Hiroaki Kuromiya, Indiana University

About the Author

Amir Weiner is Assistant Professor of History at Stanford University.

Reviews

[Weiner's] slice of the story focuses on the nature, process, and ontology of the regime's prewar, wartime, and postwar purges. He does this by tracing in painstaking, revealing detail the way these phenomena unfolded. Foreign Affairs As [Weiner] rightly observes, the second world war was a defining moment in the history of the Soviet Union and its ideology ... The power of totalitarian regimes to fashion new prejudices out of old is a subject that fascinates with horror; and it reminds us that the ancient hatreds which caused so much bloodshed and misery in the post communist world have often been quite carefully constructed, or at least revived, in relatively recent times. The Economist [A] difficult and disturbing but ultimately rewarding book. -- Lewis H. Siegelbaum Slavic Review Making Sense of War is an impressive study based on a broad reading of secondary literature and copious amounts of archival research in several countries... The greatest benefit of this new work is that it rightly foregrounds World War II in Soviet history and will cause many scholars to reflect on the meaning of 1917... Every scholar of the Soviet Union should read Making Sense of War. -- Karl D. Qualls The Russian Review Weiner's work is rich in information and implications. -- Ronald Grigor Suny Journal of Modern History A brilliant book... Weiner's insights into the impact of the war on Soviet ideology and the Soviet polity are often ironic and always valuable. -- Jacob W. Kipp Journal of Cold War Studies Amir Weiner returns us to the real, unadulterated Soviet Union. In Making Sense of the War, he indeed takes us into a new and little-known segment of its history, namely the country's wartime and postwar internal development. Until now, this subject has been ignored by Western historians. -- Martin Malia The New Republic

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