ABSTRACT

From the very first weeks of Russia’s large-scale attack on Ukraine in February 2022, Russian soldiers, politicians, and proxy administrators expended considerable effort interacting with monuments on newly occupied territory. Why did the invaders care enough about war memorials to divert scarce resources to destroying, maintaining, or building them amid a massive war? Why did they remove some memorials and spare others? What was the point of commemorating past victories and defeats while bombing Ukrainian cities, and how did commemorative ceremonies in the occupied territories

change over the first year of the war? What was the broader impact of monument-related practices beyond the local settings in which they occurred? And what does the Ukrainian case teach us more generally about how memorials to past wars can be used to justify new conquests? These are some of the questions this book explores, based on fieldwork in occupied Ukraine and online research.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

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chapter Chapter 1|24 pages

Theorizing the Monumentscape

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chapter Chapter 3|20 pages

Monuments Destroyed, Spared, and Stolen

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chapter Chapter 4|39 pages

Monuments (Re-)Built

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chapter Chapter 5|22 pages

Monuments Broadcast

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chapter Chapter 6|24 pages

Responding to Invasion: Toppling Monuments, Building Monuments

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chapter Chapter 7|24 pages

Dates, Practices, Symbols

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chapter Chapter 8|7 pages

Conclusions

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