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_a9781501780585 _9978-1-5017-8058-5 |
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_aRU-10907106 _bger _cRU-10907106 |
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041 | _aeng | ||
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_aRindlisbacher, Stephan _4aut _eAuthor _966146 |
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_aBorders in Red _bManaging Diversity in the Early Soviet Union _cStephan Rindlisbacher |
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_aIthaca _bCornell University Press _c2025 |
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300 | _a294 S. | ||
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_aText _btxt _2rdacontent |
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_aohne Hilfsmittel zu benutzen _bn _2rdamedia |
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500 | _aAuch als Open Access frei zugänglich | ||
505 | _aIntroduction1. The Leninian Moment: Making the Soviet State2. Gosplan: How to Achieve SpatialHomogeneity3. Ukraine and the RSFSR: Howto Find a Common Border4. Central Asia: How to Discuss aCommon Border5. Armenia and Azerbaijan: Howto Search for a Common Border6. How to Contextualize"Khrushchev'sGift"?Conclusion | ||
520 | _aBorders in Red shows how Lenin and his Bolshevik leadership embraced the nationality question as a way of managing diversity and institutionalized it as a means of governance. Stephan Rindlisbacher uses the making of national borders as a lens through which to examine the Bolsheviks' fundamental shift from proletarian internationalism to ethnonational federalism sui generis. Comparing how party and state managed issues of national diversity in the core regions of Soviet federalism-Ukraine, the South Caucasus, and Central Asia-Rindlisbacher provides insights into their policymaking and into the roots of current territorial conflicts. President Putin has condemned Lenin's nationality policy to be a historical mistake, and with its war against Ukraine, Russia has tried to revise borders that date back to the early days of the Soviet state. However, Borders in Red shows that the Soviet Republics were not arbitrarily divided by leaders like Stalin or Khrushchev. They were the result of long-lasting debates involving politicians, experts, and people from the border regions. The developing Soviet order was a product of trial and error. | ||
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_a1917-1936 _957142 |
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650 | _aNationalismus | ||
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_aEthnien _966389 |
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651 | _aSowjetunion | ||
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_c72347 _d72347 |