Depicting Genocide: 20th Century Responses to the HolodomorMain MenuExhibition overviewThe Holodomor and its historical contextJournalism, activism, and disinformationArtistic responses to the Holodomorthe Ukrainian History and Education Centerb536a53657e04c4edda7414158720b005f01afa8This exhibition was made possible by a grant from the New Jersey Council for the Humanities, a state partner of the National Endowment for the Humanities. Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this exhibition do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities or the New Jersey Council for the Humanities.
12023-04-05T17:32:43-04:00Michael Andrecb47dc81430ec8a9df031d1883b5156df4684c670113plain2023-05-29T18:25:33-04:00Michael Andrecb47dc81430ec8a9df031d1883b5156df4684c670The "mechanics" of what occurred in Ukraine in the 1932-1933 period are now well understood and documented. The groundbreaking research of Robert Conquest, James Mace, and other early scholars in the 1980s has now been supplemented by research done after the opening of KGB/NKVD and other Soviet government archives in Ukraine (and, for a while, in Russia) after 1991.
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12023-04-01T17:48:53-04:00Michael Andrecb47dc81430ec8a9df031d1883b5156df4684c670The Holodomor and its historical contextMichael Andrec23visual_path2023-05-29T18:08:31-04:00Michael Andrecb47dc81430ec8a9df031d1883b5156df4684c670
12023-04-05T17:35:00-04:00Michael Andrecb47dc81430ec8a9df031d1883b5156df4684c670Impact of the Holodmor in the cities2plain2023-05-30T12:33:31-04:00Michael Andrecb47dc81430ec8a9df031d1883b5156df4684c670