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Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin
Helen Roche • 2017
Timothy Snyder, a leading expert on Eastern European history, presents his work *Bloodlands*, which unifies the narrative of mass killings in Eastern Europe between 1933 and 1945. During this period, fourteen million non-combatants were murdered by Nazi and Soviet regimes, an aspect often overlooked in Western historical accounts that separate these crimes. Snyder examines Poland, the Baltic states, Ukraine, and Soviet Russia, showing how these regions experienced escalating violence from triple invasions. His transnational approach uses evidence in ten languages, humanizing victims through individual stories, and has established "bloodlands" as a key term for this lethal geographic area, influencing global historical discourse.
The Gates of Europe: A History of Ukraine
Serhii Plokhy • 2015
The text chronicles Ukraine's complex history from ancient times to its modern conflicts, emphasizing its geographical position as a crossroads between empires and cultures. It details the emergence of Ukrainian identity through various historical periods, including the Scythians, Slavs, Vikings (Rus'), the Mongol invasion, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and the rise of the Cossacks. The narrative proceeds to cover Ukraine's subjugation under the Russian and Habsburg empires, the development of national consciousness, and its tumultuous 20th century experiences with Soviet rule, two World Wars, and the Holodomor. Finally, it addresses the post-Soviet independence, democratic struggles, and the ongoing conflict with Russia, asserting a distinct, multiethnic Ukrainian identity.