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NOVIKOVA, LIUDMILA G (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   164510


Red Patriots against White Patriots: Contesting Patriotism in the Civil War in North Russia / Novikova, Liudmila G   Journal Article
Novikova, Liudmila G Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article uses the example of Arkhangel’sk province in North Russia to examine how the two main parties in the Russian Civil War—the Bolsheviks and the White armies—used elements of nationalism and xenophobia to delegitimise their enemies. It reveals the evolution of patriotic rhetoric, first used by the Whites to discredit the Bolsheviks as German agents, and then by the Reds to delegitimise the Whites as agents of the Entente. In the 1920s anti-Allied sentiments became the main trope in the memory of the civil war both among émigrés and in the Soviet North.
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2
ID:   124309


Russia's red revolutionary and white terror, 1917-1921: a provincial perspective / Novikova, Liudmila G   Journal Article
Novikova, Liudmila G Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This essay re-examines White and Red terror during the Russian Civil War by studying public participation in the acts of political violence. It shifts attention from the ideological and political motifs of terror to places and contexts where violence occurred. On the example of paramilitary groups of White and Red partisans in Arkhangel'sk province in the Russian North, it demonstrates how local factors, such as the nearby frontline, poor economic conditions or traditional enmity between neighbouring communities, contributed to the escalation of terror at a grass-root level.
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