Part I. The Explosion of Violence: 1. The Soviet advance into Germany; 2. Inheriting wartime chaos; 3. Bringing soldiers to heel after the war; 4. SVAG-Army conflicts in 'peacetime'; 5. Suicide, apathy, violence; 6. The muted German response to violence; Part II. The Beginnings of Peace and Stability: 7. The struggle to feed Germany; 8. The politics of food and peaceful protest; 9. Building the shed; 10. The shift in policy and end of chaos.
A major account of the Soviet occupation of postwar Germany and the beginning of the Cold War.
Filip Slaveski is a lecturer at the School of Historical and Philosophical Studies, University of Melbourne. He received his PhD in History from the University of Melbourne and has taught Russian and Soviet History there for a number of years. Much of his research is based on declassified Soviet archival sources relevant to his major interests of Soviet occupations in post-war Eastern Europe, particularly in Germany, and the post-war reconstruction of the Soviet Union itself. Dr Slaveski has collaborated on international research projects investigating Soviet famine in 1946–7 and its impact on Eastern Europe, the demobilisation of the Red Army from 1945, and published journal articles and book chapters in this area. His current work involves a comparative study of the chaotic reconstruction of former Soviet territories and Soviet-occupied Europe in the wake of the Second World War. It compares aspects of mass violence and social disintegration which plagued these countries and asks how violent insurgencies hindered the Soviets in their attempts at reconstructing them, providing much-needed historical insights into the most contemporary and pressing problem of modern state-building.
'… this is an extremely interesting and informative work, based on a very thorough and careful reading of a range of Russian, English and German archival, primary and secondary literature on the subject. The book is also written with a degree of passion … and, thanks to this and the author's engaging writing style, is easy to read and comprehend.' Steven J. Main, Europe-Asia Studies
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