• Lietuvių
    • English
  • Lietuvių 
    • Lietuvių
    • English
  • Prisijungti
Peržiūrėti įrašą 
  •   DSpace pagrindinis
  • Mokslinės publikacijos (PDB) / Scientific publications (PDB)
  • Moksliniai ir apžvalginiai straipsniai / Research and Review Articles
  • Straipsniai kituose recenzuojamuose leidiniuose / Articles in other peer-reviewed sources
  • Peržiūrėti įrašą
  •   DSpace pagrindinis
  • Mokslinės publikacijos (PDB) / Scientific publications (PDB)
  • Moksliniai ir apžvalginiai straipsniai / Research and Review Articles
  • Straipsniai kituose recenzuojamuose leidiniuose / Articles in other peer-reviewed sources
  • Peržiūrėti įrašą
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Free trade awry? On the export of ‘Double Genocide’ revisionism

Thumbnail
Data
2017
Autorius
Katz, Dovid
Metaduomenys
Rodyti detalų aprašą
Santrauka
The fall of the Iron Curtain swiftly enabled free trade in goods and services between the nation states of Eastern Europe freed from Soviet domination with the West and much of the rest of the world. No less important was a new flow of ideas, generally on a west-to-east trajectory, including organizing principles for political processes and governments, education, media, the arts, and more, in short, models for societal structure and governance. Western mores and institutions readily took root in those nations with substantial anti-Soviet and often anti-Russian sentiments, both among the former Warsaw Pact nations, such as Poland and Hungary, and in some former Soviet republics, principally the three Baltic states, Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia. One common denominator was a legacy, strong by virtue of personal memory and convincingly conveyed immediate family legacy, of the facts of generally successful independent statehood in the interwar period. By contrast, new states such as Belarus and Ukraine had eastern “halves” that had been part of the Soviet Union from around the time of the Russian Revolution. Their western sectors were by contrast “lost parts” of the interbellum Polish Republic, whose official languages bore irksome similarity to Russian, and they were inclined to head, at least initially, in different directions.
Paskelbimo data (metai)
2017
URI
https://etalpykla.vilniustech.lt/handle/123456789/118214
Kolekcijos
  • Straipsniai kituose recenzuojamuose leidiniuose / Articles in other peer-reviewed sources [8559]

 

 

Naršyti

Visame DSpaceRinkiniai ir kolekcijosPagal išleidimo datąAutoriaiAntraštėsTemos / Reikšminiai žodžiai InstitucijaFakultetasKatedra / institutasTipasŠaltinisLeidėjasTipas (PDB/ETD)Mokslo sritisStudijų kryptisVILNIUS TECH mokslinių tyrimų prioritetinės kryptys ir tematikosLietuvos sumanios specializacijosŠi kolekcijaPagal išleidimo datąAutoriaiAntraštėsTemos / Reikšminiai žodžiai InstitucijaFakultetasKatedra / institutasTipasŠaltinisLeidėjasTipas (PDB/ETD)Mokslo sritisStudijų kryptisVILNIUS TECH mokslinių tyrimų prioritetinės kryptys ir tematikosLietuvos sumanios specializacijos

Asmeninė paskyra

PrisijungtiRegistruotis