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Red Famine: Stalin's War on Ukraine by Anne Applebaum (English) Paperback Book

Description: Red Famine by Anne Applebaum NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • A revelatory history of one of Stalins greatest crimes, the consequences of which still resonate today, as Russia has placed Ukrainian independence in its sights once more—from the author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning Gulag and the National Book Award finalist Iron Curtain."With searing clarity, Red Famine demonstrates the horrific consequences of a campaign to eradicate backwardness when undertaken by a regime in a state of war with its own people." —The EconomistIn 1929 Stalin launched his policy of agricultural collectivization—in effect a second Russian revolution—which forced millions of peasants off their land and onto collective farms. The result was a catastrophic famine, the most lethal in European history. At least five million people died between 1931 and 1933 in the USSR. But instead of sending relief the Soviet state made use of the catastrophe to rid itself of a political problem. In Red Famine, Anne Applebaum argues that more than three million of those dead were Ukrainians who perished not because they were accidental victims of a bad policy but because the state deliberately set out to kill them. Devastating and definitive, Red Famine captures the horror of ordinary people struggling to survive extraordinary evil. Applebaums compulsively readable narrative recalls one of the worst crimes of the twentieth century, and shows how it may foreshadow a new threat to the political order in the twenty-first. FORMAT Paperback LANGUAGE English CONDITION Brand New Author Biography ANNE APPLEBAUM is a columnist for The Washington Post, a Professor of Practice at the London School of Economics, and a contributor to The New York Review of Books. Her previous books include Iron Curtain, winner of the Cundill Prize and a finalist for the National Book Award, and Gulag, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Nonfiction and a finalist for three other major prizes. She lives in Poland with her husband, Radek Sikorski, a Polish politician, and their two children. Review NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • AN ECONOMIST BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR"Applebaums account will surely become the standard treatment of one of historys great political atrocities. . . . She re-creates a pastoral world so we can view its destruction. And she rightly insists that the deliberate starvation of the Ukrainian peasants was part of a larger [Soviet] policy against the Ukrainian nation. . . . To be sure, Russia is not the Soviet Union, and Russians of today can decide whether they wish to accept a Stalinist version of the past. But to have that choice, they need a sense of the history. This is one more reason to be grateful for this remarkable book."—Timothy Snyder, Washington Post"Lucid, judicious and powerful. . . . The argument that Stalin singled out Ukraine for special punishment is well-made. . . . [An] excellent and important book." —Anna Reid, Wall Street Journal"Applebaum chronicles in almost unbearably intimate detail the ruin wrought upon Ukraine by Josef Stalin and the Soviet state apparatus he had built on suspicion, paranoia, and fear. . . . Applebaum gives a chorus of contemporary voices to the tale, and her book is written in the light of later history, with the fate of Ukraine once again in the international spotlight and Ukrainians realizing with newly-relevant intensity that, as Red Famine reminds us, History offers hope as well as tragedy."—Steve Donoghue, Christian Science Monitor"A magisterial and heartbreaking history of Stalins Ukrainian famine." —Simon Sebag Montefiore, London Evening Standard "Powerful. . . . War, as Carl von Clausewitz famously put it, is the continuation of politics by other means. The politics in this case was the Sovietisation of Ukraine; the means was starvation. Food supply was not mismanaged by Utopian dreamers. It was weaponised. . . . With searing clarity, Red Famine demonstrates the horrific consequences of a campaign to eradicate backwardness when undertaken by a regime in a state of war with its own people."—The Economist"Anne Applebaums Red Famine—powerful, relentless, shocking, compelling—will cement her deserved reputation as the leading historian of Soviet crimes." —Daniel Finkelstein, The Times (London)"Chilling, dramatic. . . . In her detailed, well-rendered narrative, Applebaum provides a crucial backstory for understanding current relations between Russia and Ukraine. An authoritative history of national strife from a highly knowledgeable guide." —Kirkus Reviews (starred review) Review Quote NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER * AN ECONOMIST BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR "Applebaums account will surely become the standard treatment of one of historys great political atrocities. . . . She re-creates a pastoral world so we can view its destruction. And she rightly insists that the deliberate starvation of the Ukrainian peasants was part of a larger [Soviet] policy against the Ukrainian nation. . . . To be sure, Russia is not the Soviet Union, and Russians of today can decide whether they wish to accept a Stalinist version of the past. But to have that choice, they need a sense of the history. This is one more reason to be grateful for this remarkable book." --Timothy Snyder, Washington Post "Lucid, judicious and powerful. . . . The argument that Stalin singled out Ukraine for special punishment is well-made. . . . [An] excellent and important book." --Anna Reid, Wall Street Journal "Applebaum chronicles in almost unbearably intimate detail the ruin wrought upon Ukraine by Josef Stalin and the Soviet state apparatus he had built on suspicion, paranoia, and fear. . . . Applebaum gives a chorus of contemporary voices to the tale, and her book is written in the light of later history, with the fate of Ukraine once again in the international spotlight and Ukrainians realizing with newly-relevant intensity that, as Red Famine reminds us, History offers hope as well as tragedy." --Steve Donoghue, Christian Science Monitor "A magisterial and heartbreaking history of Stalins Ukrainian famine." --Simon Sebag Montefiore, London Evening Standard "Powerful. . . . War, as Carl von Clausewitz famously put it, is the continuation of politics by other means. The politics in this case was the Sovietisation of Ukraine; the means was starvation. Food supply was not mismanaged by Utopian dreamers. It was weaponised. . . . With searing clarity, Red Famine demonstrates the horrific consequences of a campaign to eradicate backwardness when undertaken by a regime in a state of war with its own people." -- The Economist "Anne Applebaums Red Famine --powerful, relentless, shocking, compelling--will cement her deserved reputation as the leading historian of Soviet crimes." --Daniel Finkelstein, The Times (London) "Chilling, dramatic. . . . In her detailed, well-rendered narrative, Applebaum provides a crucial backstory for understanding current relations between Russia and Ukraine. An authoritative history of national strife from a highly knowledgeable guide." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) Excerpt from Book INTRODUCTION The Ukrainian Question For centuries, the geography of Ukraine shaped the destiny of Ukraine. The Carpathian Mountains marked the border in the southwest, but the gentle forests and fields in the northwestern part of the country could not stop invading armies, and neither could the wide open steppe in the east. All of Ukraines great cities--Dnipropetrovsk and Odessa, Donetsk and Kharkiv, Poltava and Cherkasy and of course Kyiv, the ancient capital--lie in the East European Plain, a flatland that stretches across most of the country. Nikolai Gogol, a Ukrainian who wrote in Russian, once observed that the Dnieper River flows through the centre of Ukraine and forms a basin. From there "the rivers all branch out from the centre; not a single one of them flows along the border or serves as a natural border with neighbouring nations." This fact had political consequences: "Had there been a natural border of mountains or sea on one side, the people who settled here would have carried on their political way of life and would have formed a separate nation." The absence of natural borders helps explain why Ukrainians failed, until the late twentieth century, to establish a sovereign Ukrainian state. By the late Middle Ages, there was a distinct Ukrainian language, with Slavic roots, related to but distinct from both Polish and Russian, much as Italian is related to but distinct from Spanish or French. Ukrainians had their own food, their own customs and local traditions, their own villains, heroes and legends. Like other European nations, Ukraines sense of identity sharpened during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. But for most of its history the territory we now call Ukraine was, like Ireland or Slovakia, a colony that formed part of other European land empires. Ukraine--the word means "borderland" in both Russian and Polish--belongedto the Russian empire between the eighteenth and twentieth centuries. Prior to that, the same lands belonged to Poland, or rather the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, which inherited them in 1569 from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Earlier still, Ukrainian lands lay at the heart of Kyivan Rus, the medieval state in the ninth century formed by Slavic tribes and a Viking nobility, and, in the memories of the region, an almost mythical kingdom that Russians, Belarusians and Ukrainians all claim as their ancestor. Over many centuries, imperial armies battled over Ukraine, sometimes with Ukrainian-speaking troops on both sides of the front lines. Polish hussars fought Turkish janissaries for control of what is now the Ukrainian town of Khotyn in 1621. The troops of the Russian tsar fought those of the Austro-Hungarian emperor in 1914 in Galicia. Hitlers armies fought against Stalins in Kyiv, Lviv, Odessa and Sevastopol between 1941 and 1945. The battle for control of Ukrainian territory always had an intellectual component as well. Ever since Europeans began to debate the meaning of nations and nationalism, historians, writers, journalists, poets and ethnographers have argued over the extent of Ukraine and the nature of the Ukrainians. From the time of their first contacts in the early Middle Ages, Poles always acknowledged that the Ukrainians were linguistically and culturally separate from themselves, even when they were part of the same state. Many of the Ukrainians who accepted Polish aristocratic titles in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries remained Orthodox Christians, not Roman Catholics; Ukrainian peasants spoke a language that the Poles called "Ruthenian," and were always described as having different customs, different music, different food. Although at their imperial zenith they were more reluctant to acknowledge it, Muscovites also felt instinctively that Ukraine, which they sometimes called "southern Russia" or "little Russia," differed from their northern homeland too. An early Russian traveller, Prince Ivan Dolgorukov, wrote in 1810 of the moment when his party finally "entered the borders of the Ukraine. My thoughts turned to [Bohdan] Khmelnytsky and [Ivan] Mazepa"--early Ukrainian national leaders--"and the alleys of trees disappeared . . . everywhere, without exception, there were clay huts, and there was no other accommodation." The historian Serhiy Bilenky has observed that nineteenth-century Russians often had the same paternalistic attitude to Ukraine that northern Europeans at the time had towards Italy. Ukraine was an idealized, alternative nation, more primitive and at the same time more authentic, more emotional, more poetic than Russia.4 Poles also remained nostalgic for "their" Ukrainian lands long after they had been lost, making them the subject of romantic poetry and fiction. Yet even while acknowledging the differences, both Poles and Russians also sought at times to undermine or deny the existence of a Ukrainian nation. "The history of Little Russia is like a tributary entering the main river of Russian history," wrote Vissarion Belinsky, a leading theorist of nineteenth-century Russian nationalism. "Little Russians were always a tribe and never a people and still less--a state." Russian scholars and bureaucrats treated the Ukrainian language as "a dialect, or half a dialect, or a mode of speech of the all-Russian language, in one word a patois, and as such had no right to an independent existence." Unofficially, Russian writers used it to indicate colloquial or peasant speech. Polish writers, meanwhile, tended to stress the "emptiness" of the territory to the east, often describing the Ukrainian lands as an "uncivilized frontier, into which they brought culture and state formations." The Poles used the expression dzikie pola, "wild fields," to describe the empty lands of eastern Ukraine, a region that functioned, in their national imagination, much as the Wild West did in America. Solid economic reasons lay behind these attitudes. The Greek historian Herodotus himself wrote about Ukraines famous "black earth," the rich soil that is especially fertile in the lower part of the Dnieper River basin: "No better crops grow anywhere than along its banks, and where grain is not sown, the grass is the most luxuriant in the world." The black-earth district encompasses about two-thirds of modern Ukraine--spreading from there into Russia and Kazakhstan--and, along with a relatively mild climate, makes it possible for Ukraine to produce two harvests every year. "Winter wheat" is planted in the autumn, and harvested in July and August; spring grains are planted in April and May, and harvested in October and November. The crops yielded by Ukraines exceptionally fertile land have long inspired ambitious traders. From the late Middle Ages, Polish merchants had brought Ukrainian grain northwards into the trade routes of the Baltic Sea. Polish princes and nobles set up what were, in modern parlance, early enterprise zones, offering exemptions from tax and military service to peasants who were willing to farm and develop Ukrainian land. The desire to hold on to such valuable property often lay behind the colonialist arguments: neither the Poles nor the Russians wanted to concedethat their agricultural breadbasket had an independent identity. Nevertheless, quite apart from what their neighbours thought, a separate and distinct Ukrainian identity did take shape in the territories that now form modern Ukraine. From the end of the Middle Ages onwards, the people of this region shared a sense of who they were, often, though not always, defining themselves in opposition to occupying foreigners, whether Polish or Russian. Like the Russians and the Belarusians, they traced their history back to the kings and queens of Kyivan Rus, and many felt themselves to be part of a great East Slavic civilization. Others identified themselves as underdogs or rebels, particularly admiring the great revolts of the Zaporozhian Cossacks, led by Bohdan Khmelnytsky, against Polish rule in the seventeenth century, and by Ivan Mazepa against Russian rule at the beginning of the eighteenth century. The Ukrainian Cossacks--self-governing, semi-military communities with their own internal laws--were the first Ukrainians to transform that sense of identity and grievance into concrete political projects, winning unusual privileges and a degree of autonomy from the tsars. Memorably (certainly later generations of Russian and Soviet leaders never forgot it), Ukrainian Cossacks joined the Polish army in its march on Moscow in 1610 and again in 1618, taking part in a siege of the city and helping ensure that the Polish-Russian conflict of that era ended, at least for a time, advantageously for Poland. Later, the tsars gave both the Ukrainian Cossacks and Russian-speaking Don Cossacks special status in order to keep them loyal to the Russian empire, with which they were allowed to preserve a particular identity. Their privileges guaranteed that they did not revolt. But Khmelnytsky and Mazepa left their mark on Polish and Russian memory, and on European history and literature too. "LUkraine a toujours aspir Details ISBN0804170886 Author Anne Applebaum Short Title RED FAMINE Pages 608 Language English ISBN-10 0804170886 ISBN-13 9780804170888 Format Paperback Year 2018 Publication Date 2018-09-04 Subtitle Stalins War on Ukraine Country of Publication United States AU Release Date 2018-09-04 NZ Release Date 2018-09-04 US Release Date 2018-09-04 UK Release Date 2018-09-04 Place of Publication New York Publisher Random House USA Inc DEWEY 947.70842 Illustrations 24 PP OF PHOTOGRAPHS Audience General Imprint Vintage Books We've got this At The Nile, if you're looking for it, we've got it. 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