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      Multiculturalism, memory, and ritualization: Ukrainian nationalist monuments in Edmonton, Alberta

      Nationalities Papers
      Informa UK Limited

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          Abstract

          Canadians of Ukrainian descent constitute a significant part of the population of the Albertan capital. Among other things, their presence is felt in the public space as Ukrainian monuments constitute a part of the landscape. The article studies three key monuments, physical manifestations of the ideology of local Ukrainian nationalist elites in Edmonton: a 1973 monument to nationalist leader Roman Shukhevych, a 1976 memorial constructed by the Ukrainian Waffen-SS in Edmonton, and a 1983 memorial to the 1932–1933 famine in the Ukrainian SSR. Representing a narrative of suffering, resistance, and redemption, all three monuments were organized by the same activists and are representative for the selective memory of an “ethnic” elite, which presents nationalist ideology as authentic Ukrainian cultural heritage. The narrative is based partly upon an uncritical cult of totalitarian, anti-Semitic, and terroristic political figures, whose war crimes, ethnic cleansing, and collaboration with Nazi Germany the nationalists deny and obfuscate. The article argues that government support and direct public funding has strengthened the radicals within the community and helped promulgate their mythology. In the case of the Ukrainian Canadian political elite, official multiculturalism underwrites a narrative at odds with the liberal democratic values it was intended to promote. The failure to deconstruct the “ethnic” building blocks of Canadian multiculturalism and the willingness to accept at face value the primordial claims and nationalist myths of “ethnic” groups has given Canadian multiculturalism the character of multi-nationalism.

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          Most cited references78

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          Between Memory and History: Les Lieux de Memoire

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            The USSR as a Communal Apartment, or How a Socialist State Promoted Ethnic Particularism

            Soviet nationality policy was devised and carried out by nationalists. Lenin's acceptance of the reality of nations and "national rights" was one of the most uncompromising positions he ever took, his theory of good ("oppressed-nation") nationalism formed the conceptual foundation of the Soviet Union and his NEP-time policy of compensatory "nation-building" (natsional'noe stroitel'stvo) was a spectacularly successful attempt at a state-sponsored conflation of language, "culture," territory and quota-fed bureaucracy.
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              Bloodlands: Europe between Hitler and Stalin

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Nationalities Papers
                Natl. pap.
                Informa UK Limited
                0090-5992
                1465-3923
                September 2011
                November 20 2018
                September 2011
                : 39
                : 5
                : 733-768
                Article
                10.1080/00905992.2011.599375
                bfaf0853-a05b-4a2f-a1b5-abc5e31169da
                © 2011

                https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms

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