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Appendix: Dnipropetrovsk State University, Khortitsa ’99, and the Renaissance of Public (Mennonite) History in Ukraine
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Leonard G. Friesen
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- A Note on Transliteration and Nomenclature xi
- Introduction 1
-
Part One: Overviews: New Approaches to Mennonite History
- 1. “Land of Opportunity, Sites of Devastation”: Notes on the History of the Borozenko Daughter Colony 25
- 2. Afforestation as Performance Art: Johann Cornies’ Aesthetics of Civilization 61
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Part Two: Imperial Mennonite Isolationism Revisited
- 3. Mennonite Schools and the Russian Empire: The Transformation of Church-State Relations in Education, 1789–1917 85
- 4. A Foreign Faith but of What Sort? The Mennonite Church and the Russian Empire, 1789–1917 110
- 5. Mennonite Entrepreneurs and Russian Nationalists in the Russian Empire, 1830–1917 142
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Part Three: Mennonite Identities in Diaspora
- 6. Mennonite Identities in a New Land: Abraham A. Friesen and the Russian Mennonite Migration of the 1920s 181
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Part Four: Mennonite Identities in the Soviet Cauldron
- 7. Collectivizing the Mutter Ansiedlungen: The Role of Mennonites in Organizing Kolkhozy in the Khortytsia and Molochansk German National Districts in Ukraine in the Late 1920s and Early 1930s 211
- 8. Kulak, Christian, and German: Ukrainian Mennonite Identities in a Time of Famine, 1932–1935 260
- 9. Caught between Two Poles: Ukrainian Mennonites and the Trauma of the Second World War 287
- Appendix: Dnipropetrovsk State University, Khortitsa ’99, and the Renaissance of Public (Mennonite) History in Ukraine 319
- Contributors 333
- Index 335
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- A Note on Transliteration and Nomenclature xi
- Introduction 1
-
Part One: Overviews: New Approaches to Mennonite History
- 1. “Land of Opportunity, Sites of Devastation”: Notes on the History of the Borozenko Daughter Colony 25
- 2. Afforestation as Performance Art: Johann Cornies’ Aesthetics of Civilization 61
-
Part Two: Imperial Mennonite Isolationism Revisited
- 3. Mennonite Schools and the Russian Empire: The Transformation of Church-State Relations in Education, 1789–1917 85
- 4. A Foreign Faith but of What Sort? The Mennonite Church and the Russian Empire, 1789–1917 110
- 5. Mennonite Entrepreneurs and Russian Nationalists in the Russian Empire, 1830–1917 142
-
Part Three: Mennonite Identities in Diaspora
- 6. Mennonite Identities in a New Land: Abraham A. Friesen and the Russian Mennonite Migration of the 1920s 181
-
Part Four: Mennonite Identities in the Soviet Cauldron
- 7. Collectivizing the Mutter Ansiedlungen: The Role of Mennonites in Organizing Kolkhozy in the Khortytsia and Molochansk German National Districts in Ukraine in the Late 1920s and Early 1930s 211
- 8. Kulak, Christian, and German: Ukrainian Mennonite Identities in a Time of Famine, 1932–1935 260
- 9. Caught between Two Poles: Ukrainian Mennonites and the Trauma of the Second World War 287
- Appendix: Dnipropetrovsk State University, Khortitsa ’99, and the Renaissance of Public (Mennonite) History in Ukraine 319
- Contributors 333
- Index 335