PředmětyPředměty(verze: 970)
Předmět, akademický rok 2024/2025
   Přihlásit přes CAS
Intellectual History of Ucraine in the East Slavic World - AVES01132
Anglický název: Intellectual History of Ucraine in the East Slavic World
Zajišťuje: Ústav východoevropských studií (21-UVES)
Fakulta: Filozofická fakulta
Platnost: od 2024
Semestr: zimní
Body: 0
E-Kredity: 5
Způsob provedení zkoušky: zimní s.:
Rozsah, examinace: zimní s.:0/2, Zk [HT]
Počet míst: neurčen / neomezen (neurčen)
Minimální obsazenost: neomezen
4EU+: ne
Virtuální mobilita / počet míst pro virtuální mobilitu: ne
Kompetence:  
Stav předmětu: vyučován
Jazyk výuky: angličtina
Způsob výuky: prezenční
Úroveň:  
Poznámka: předmět je možno zapsat mimo plán
povolen pro zápis po webu
Záměnnost : AVS200010
Anotace
Alexander Dmitriev
Intellectual History of Ukraine

The course will be based on the problems of Ukraine's autonomy and independence in ideological, cultural and historiographical contexts, mainly on the material of the 19th-20th centuries. Previous epochs and contemporary materials will be considered to clarify the key phenomenon of Ukrainian national revival, the revolution of 1917-1921, the important period of 1921-1939, and Ukraine's subsequent existence within the Soviet project. Important attention will be paid to the contribution of historians, writers and philologists to the understanding of Ukrainian self-determination both in the imperial and Soviet / exiled context and in the framework of comparative analysis of Belarusian and Russian ideological development.

The schedule of classes

1. How to outline the intellectual history of Ukraine? The question of minorities: “Great Russians,” Jews, Tatars, and others.
2. The Middle Ages and the of Early Modern times. The question of the Baroque. Kyiv Mohyla Collegium, Skovoroda and Pilip Orlik.
3. Ukrainian romanticism, Shevchenko and Kostomarov.
4. Pantelejmon Kuliš 's phenomenon: transformation of the ideas of 1848.
5. Mykhailo Drahomanov and Europe.
6. Galicia, “Ruthenian Thriad” and the birth of Shevchenko's Scientific Society.
7. Mykhailo Hrushevsky and Ivan Franko.
8. The effect of the First World War and the National Revolution of 1917.
9. National Communism, Populist and Statist Vision of the Ukrainian past. Mykola Khvylovy, Mykola Zerov, and Dmytro Dontsov.
10. Dmytro Chyzhevsky, Victor Petrov (Domontovych) and Ivan Lysiak-Rudnitsky - the peculiarities of Ukrainian development.
11. Ukrainian dissidence, the magazine “Suchasnist’” and Independence. The Legacy of Ivan Dzyuba and Yuri Shevelov.
12. Post-Soviet period and its variants of transition. The defeat of “multi-vector” policy.
13. Prospects for the 21st century. Russian aggression and prospects for decolonization.


List of Literature:

1. Von Hagen M. Does Ukraine have a history? // Slavic Review. 1995. Vol. 54. №. 3. P. 658-673.
2. Portnov A. et al. Whose Language Do We Speak? Some Reflections on the Master Narrative of Ukrainian History Writing // Ab Imperio. 2020. №. 4. С. 88-129.
3. Plokhy S. The origins of the Slavic nations: Premodern identities in Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus. Cambridge, 2006.
4. Ukraine and Europe: cultural encounters and negotiations / G. Bercoff, M. Pavlyshyn, S. Plokhy (eds.) Toronto, 2017.
5. Eighteenth-Century Ukraine: New Perspectives on Social, Cultural, and Intellectual History / Zenon Kohut et al. (eds.) Montreal, 2023.
6. Grabowicz G. G. Taras Shevchenko: The Making of the National Poet //Revue des études slaves. 2014. Vol. 85. № LXXXV-3. P. 421-439.
7. Danylenko A. From the Bible to Shakespeare: Pantelejmon Kuliš (1819–97) and the Formation of Literary Ukrainian. Boston, 2016.
8. Wolff L. The Idea of Galicia: History and Fantasy in Habsburg Political Culture. Stanford, 2010.
9. Lysiak-Rudnytsky I. The Ukrainians in Galicia under Austrian Rule // Austrian History Yearbook. 1967. Vol. 3. №. 2. P. 394-429.
10. McReynolds L. Archeologists Imagine Ukraine: Social Scientists and Nation Building in the Nineteenth Century // Slavic Review. 2024. Vol. 83. №. 1. P. 92-111.
11. Zayarnyuk A., Sereda O. The Intellectual Foundations of Modern Ukraine: The Nineteenth Century. London, 2022.
12. Bilenky S. Laboratory of Modernity: Ukraine between Empire and Nation, 1772–1914. Montreal, 2023.
13. Plokhy S. Unmaking Imperial Russia: Mykhailo Hrushevsky and the writing of Ukrainian history. Toronto, 2005.
14. Palko O. Making Ukraine Soviet: literature and cultural politics under Lenin and Stalin. London, 2020.
15. Erlacher T. Ukrainian nationalism in the age of extremes. An Intellectual Biography of Dmytro Dontsov. Harvard, 2021.
16. Yekelchyk S. et al. Stalin's empire of memory: Russian-Ukrainian relations in the Soviet historical imagination. Toronto, 2004.
17. Ther P., Kasianov G. A laboratory of transnational history: Ukraine and recent Ukrainian historiography. Budapest, 2008.
18. Bellezza S. The Shore of Expectations: A Cultural Study of the Shistdesiatnyky. Edmonton, 2019.




Poslední úprava: Štoll Pavel, Mgr., Ph.D. (23.09.2024)
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Poslední úprava: Štoll Pavel, Mgr., Ph.D. (16.06.2024)
 
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