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Vlasov and the Russian Liberation Movement Catherine Andreyev (University of Oxford)

Vlasov and the Russian Liberation Movement By Catherine Andreyev (University of Oxford)

Vlasov and the Russian Liberation Movement by Catherine Andreyev (University of Oxford)


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Summary

A text that deals with the attempt by Soviet citizens to create an anti-Soviet Liberation Movement during World War II. Comprised mainly of prisoners-of-war, forced labourers and the inhabitants of Soviet-occupied territories, the Movement was encouraged by Nazi orthodoxy.

Vlasov and the Russian Liberation Movement Summary

Vlasov and the Russian Liberation Movement: Soviet Reality and Emigre Theories by Catherine Andreyev (University of Oxford)

Vlasov and the Russian Liberation Movement deals with the attempt by Soviet citizens to create a Russian anti-Stalinist liberation movement during the Second World War. These Soviet citizens were mainly prisoners-of-war, forced labourers or part of the population of the occupied territories of the USSR. The Liberation Movement was encouraged by German officers who disagreed with Nazi policy towards the USSR, as their experience showed that treating the population as 'subhumans' (Untermensch) merely increased resistance to Nazi occupation. Throughout the development of the Liberation Movement there existed a divergence of aims between the Russian members who wished to form an army and a political movement which would effect change within the USSR, and its German supporters who merely wished to alter the type of propaganda directed towards the population of the USSR. Catherine Andreyev provides an account of the evolution of the Russian Liberation Movement and examines the motivation of the titular leader of the movement, Lieutenant-General Andrey Andreyevich Vlasov. The main focus of the book is the ideology of the Liberation Movement, the importance of which lies in the fact that it represented the first grass-roots opposition movement within the Soviet Union since the end of the Civil War in 1922. The programme of the Movement reflects issues which would have been raised by citizens in the 1930s had they been free to do so. Catherine Andreyev examines influences on the programme, and the ideas expressed are placed within the context of the pre-war Soviet and Russian emigre society.

Vlasov and the Russian Liberation Movement Reviews

'This volume succeeds not only in navigating through historiographical shoals but in making an original and significant contribution to our understanding of Andrey Vlasov, a highly decorated Red Army general who in German captivity presided over a chimerical Russian Army of Liberation until the collapse of the Third Reich sealed his fate if not his posthumous reputation Lucidly written and serenely controversial, it will evoke animated reactions among students of the Russian emigration and Soviet-German war, not to mention among emigres of all three waves.' John J. Stephen, Soviet Studies

Table of Contents

List of figures; Preface; List of abbreviations; Introduction; 1. Foundations; 2. Ideals; 3. The Russian idea; Conclusion; Appendices; Select bibliography; Index.

Additional information

NPB9780521389600
9780521389600
0521389607
Vlasov and the Russian Liberation Movement: Soviet Reality and Emigre Theories by Catherine Andreyev (University of Oxford)
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
1989-11-23
272
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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