Victims of Soviet terror : the story of the Memorial movement
著者
書誌事項
Victims of Soviet terror : the story of the Memorial movement
Praeger, 1993
- : alk. paper
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [151]) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
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.
目次
Foreword
Preface
Introduction
Memorial: History as Moral Imperative
The Formation of the Soviet System
Stalinism: Inheritance and Legacy
The Rediscovery of Soviet History
The Emergence and Evolution of Memorial
1987-1988: Gaining Support
1988-1989: Towards the Founding Conference
1989-1990: Memorial Branches Out
Memorial Actualizes Itself
History as Dissidence
Memorial in Action
The Politics of Memorial
"Today We Are Historians of Dissidence, And Not Dissidents"
Appendix A
Appendix B
Bibliography
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