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Explores what happened in rural society when a wave of persecution was launched in the Estonian countryside after the Second World War in connection with collectivization. It also answers questions about the reactions of Communist Party representatives, local councils, the farm population, the accused, and the not-yet accused.
Explores what happened in rural society when a wave of persecution was launched in the Estonian countryside after the Second World War in connection with collectivization. It also answers questions about the reactions of Communist Party representatives, local councils, the farm population, the accused, and the not-yet accused.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Central European University Press
- Seitenzahl: 296
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. März 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 582g
- ISBN-13: 9786155225147
- ISBN-10: 6155225141
- Artikelnr.: 36981949
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Central European University Press
- Seitenzahl: 296
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. März 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 582g
- ISBN-13: 9786155225147
- ISBN-10: 6155225141
- Artikelnr.: 36981949
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Anu Mai Kõll is Professor of Baltic History and Director of the Centre for Baltic and East European Studies at Södertörn University, Sweden.
List of Tables and Graphs, List of Photographs, Preface, 1. The Land
Question in Estonia 1.1. Agriculture and the First Soviet Year 1940-41 1.2.
Nazi Occupation 1941-1944 1.3. Reconstruction of Soviet Estonia 1.4.
Estonians Living in the Soviet Union 1.5. Land Reform 1944-45 1.6. The
Anti-kulak Campaign, 1947-49 1.7. Deportation 1.8. The Aim of the Book 1.9.
Organization of the Book 2. Soviet Repression as a Special Case of State
Violence 2.1. Research into Violence in the Soviet System 2.2. Kulaks and
Collectivisation in 1929-32 2.3. The Estonian Anti-kulak Campaign 2.4.
Comparing Anti-kulak Campaigns in 1929-32 and 1947-49 2.5. Aspects Pursued
in this Local Study 2.6. The Soviet Estonian Archives 3. The Anti-kulak
Campaign 3.1. Seizing Power 3.2. Local Authorities 3.3. The Land Reform
3.4. Persecution of the Kulaks Begins 3.5. Was there Freedom of Action?
3.6. The Kulak Taxes 3.7. The Exclusion of Kulaks 3.8. From Campaign to
Deportation 3.9. Liquidation of the Kulaks 3.10. The Extent of Local
Participation 4. Inventing Kulaks 4.1. The Process 4.2. The Voices of
Kulaks 4.3. The Appeals 4.4. Retroactive Soviet Law 4.5. Negotiations
Concerning Exploitation 4.6. Negotiations Concerning Prisoners of War 4.7.
The Political Criteria 4.8. Kulak Strategies 4.9. Negotiation as
Participation 4.10. The Result of Negotiations: Kulak Declarations. 5.
Participation at the Local Level 5.1. The Local Nomenklatura 5.2. The Cadre
Policy 5.3. The Reluctant Henchman 5.4. The Ambitious Bureaucrat 5.5. The
Tender Wolf 5.6. Persecute or Perish 5.7. Persecution as a Social Process
5.8. Communist Party and Councils in Viljandi County 5.9. The Security
Forces 5.10. Why did Local People Participate? 6. Epilogue of March 1949
6.1. Rapid Collectivisation 6.2. Division of the Spoils 6.3. Stepping Out
of Line 6.4. Not on the Deportation List 6.5. A Normal Stalinist Purge 6.6.
The Purge of ECP in 1950 6.7. Lessons of the Campaign 7. The Grammar of
Terror 7.1. Responsibility and Participation 7.2. Participation and
Discourse 7.3. Participation in a Bureaucratic Procedure 7.4.
Participants-How did They Get There? 7.5. Openness and Legitimacy 7.6. The
Importance of War 7.7. A Grammar of Terror? Appendixes, Bibliography,
Index.
Question in Estonia 1.1. Agriculture and the First Soviet Year 1940-41 1.2.
Nazi Occupation 1941-1944 1.3. Reconstruction of Soviet Estonia 1.4.
Estonians Living in the Soviet Union 1.5. Land Reform 1944-45 1.6. The
Anti-kulak Campaign, 1947-49 1.7. Deportation 1.8. The Aim of the Book 1.9.
Organization of the Book 2. Soviet Repression as a Special Case of State
Violence 2.1. Research into Violence in the Soviet System 2.2. Kulaks and
Collectivisation in 1929-32 2.3. The Estonian Anti-kulak Campaign 2.4.
Comparing Anti-kulak Campaigns in 1929-32 and 1947-49 2.5. Aspects Pursued
in this Local Study 2.6. The Soviet Estonian Archives 3. The Anti-kulak
Campaign 3.1. Seizing Power 3.2. Local Authorities 3.3. The Land Reform
3.4. Persecution of the Kulaks Begins 3.5. Was there Freedom of Action?
3.6. The Kulak Taxes 3.7. The Exclusion of Kulaks 3.8. From Campaign to
Deportation 3.9. Liquidation of the Kulaks 3.10. The Extent of Local
Participation 4. Inventing Kulaks 4.1. The Process 4.2. The Voices of
Kulaks 4.3. The Appeals 4.4. Retroactive Soviet Law 4.5. Negotiations
Concerning Exploitation 4.6. Negotiations Concerning Prisoners of War 4.7.
The Political Criteria 4.8. Kulak Strategies 4.9. Negotiation as
Participation 4.10. The Result of Negotiations: Kulak Declarations. 5.
Participation at the Local Level 5.1. The Local Nomenklatura 5.2. The Cadre
Policy 5.3. The Reluctant Henchman 5.4. The Ambitious Bureaucrat 5.5. The
Tender Wolf 5.6. Persecute or Perish 5.7. Persecution as a Social Process
5.8. Communist Party and Councils in Viljandi County 5.9. The Security
Forces 5.10. Why did Local People Participate? 6. Epilogue of March 1949
6.1. Rapid Collectivisation 6.2. Division of the Spoils 6.3. Stepping Out
of Line 6.4. Not on the Deportation List 6.5. A Normal Stalinist Purge 6.6.
The Purge of ECP in 1950 6.7. Lessons of the Campaign 7. The Grammar of
Terror 7.1. Responsibility and Participation 7.2. Participation and
Discourse 7.3. Participation in a Bureaucratic Procedure 7.4.
Participants-How did They Get There? 7.5. Openness and Legitimacy 7.6. The
Importance of War 7.7. A Grammar of Terror? Appendixes, Bibliography,
Index.
List of Tables and Graphs, List of Photographs, Preface, 1. The Land
Question in Estonia 1.1. Agriculture and the First Soviet Year 1940-41 1.2.
Nazi Occupation 1941-1944 1.3. Reconstruction of Soviet Estonia 1.4.
Estonians Living in the Soviet Union 1.5. Land Reform 1944-45 1.6. The
Anti-kulak Campaign, 1947-49 1.7. Deportation 1.8. The Aim of the Book 1.9.
Organization of the Book 2. Soviet Repression as a Special Case of State
Violence 2.1. Research into Violence in the Soviet System 2.2. Kulaks and
Collectivisation in 1929-32 2.3. The Estonian Anti-kulak Campaign 2.4.
Comparing Anti-kulak Campaigns in 1929-32 and 1947-49 2.5. Aspects Pursued
in this Local Study 2.6. The Soviet Estonian Archives 3. The Anti-kulak
Campaign 3.1. Seizing Power 3.2. Local Authorities 3.3. The Land Reform
3.4. Persecution of the Kulaks Begins 3.5. Was there Freedom of Action?
3.6. The Kulak Taxes 3.7. The Exclusion of Kulaks 3.8. From Campaign to
Deportation 3.9. Liquidation of the Kulaks 3.10. The Extent of Local
Participation 4. Inventing Kulaks 4.1. The Process 4.2. The Voices of
Kulaks 4.3. The Appeals 4.4. Retroactive Soviet Law 4.5. Negotiations
Concerning Exploitation 4.6. Negotiations Concerning Prisoners of War 4.7.
The Political Criteria 4.8. Kulak Strategies 4.9. Negotiation as
Participation 4.10. The Result of Negotiations: Kulak Declarations. 5.
Participation at the Local Level 5.1. The Local Nomenklatura 5.2. The Cadre
Policy 5.3. The Reluctant Henchman 5.4. The Ambitious Bureaucrat 5.5. The
Tender Wolf 5.6. Persecute or Perish 5.7. Persecution as a Social Process
5.8. Communist Party and Councils in Viljandi County 5.9. The Security
Forces 5.10. Why did Local People Participate? 6. Epilogue of March 1949
6.1. Rapid Collectivisation 6.2. Division of the Spoils 6.3. Stepping Out
of Line 6.4. Not on the Deportation List 6.5. A Normal Stalinist Purge 6.6.
The Purge of ECP in 1950 6.7. Lessons of the Campaign 7. The Grammar of
Terror 7.1. Responsibility and Participation 7.2. Participation and
Discourse 7.3. Participation in a Bureaucratic Procedure 7.4.
Participants-How did They Get There? 7.5. Openness and Legitimacy 7.6. The
Importance of War 7.7. A Grammar of Terror? Appendixes, Bibliography,
Index.
Question in Estonia 1.1. Agriculture and the First Soviet Year 1940-41 1.2.
Nazi Occupation 1941-1944 1.3. Reconstruction of Soviet Estonia 1.4.
Estonians Living in the Soviet Union 1.5. Land Reform 1944-45 1.6. The
Anti-kulak Campaign, 1947-49 1.7. Deportation 1.8. The Aim of the Book 1.9.
Organization of the Book 2. Soviet Repression as a Special Case of State
Violence 2.1. Research into Violence in the Soviet System 2.2. Kulaks and
Collectivisation in 1929-32 2.3. The Estonian Anti-kulak Campaign 2.4.
Comparing Anti-kulak Campaigns in 1929-32 and 1947-49 2.5. Aspects Pursued
in this Local Study 2.6. The Soviet Estonian Archives 3. The Anti-kulak
Campaign 3.1. Seizing Power 3.2. Local Authorities 3.3. The Land Reform
3.4. Persecution of the Kulaks Begins 3.5. Was there Freedom of Action?
3.6. The Kulak Taxes 3.7. The Exclusion of Kulaks 3.8. From Campaign to
Deportation 3.9. Liquidation of the Kulaks 3.10. The Extent of Local
Participation 4. Inventing Kulaks 4.1. The Process 4.2. The Voices of
Kulaks 4.3. The Appeals 4.4. Retroactive Soviet Law 4.5. Negotiations
Concerning Exploitation 4.6. Negotiations Concerning Prisoners of War 4.7.
The Political Criteria 4.8. Kulak Strategies 4.9. Negotiation as
Participation 4.10. The Result of Negotiations: Kulak Declarations. 5.
Participation at the Local Level 5.1. The Local Nomenklatura 5.2. The Cadre
Policy 5.3. The Reluctant Henchman 5.4. The Ambitious Bureaucrat 5.5. The
Tender Wolf 5.6. Persecute or Perish 5.7. Persecution as a Social Process
5.8. Communist Party and Councils in Viljandi County 5.9. The Security
Forces 5.10. Why did Local People Participate? 6. Epilogue of March 1949
6.1. Rapid Collectivisation 6.2. Division of the Spoils 6.3. Stepping Out
of Line 6.4. Not on the Deportation List 6.5. A Normal Stalinist Purge 6.6.
The Purge of ECP in 1950 6.7. Lessons of the Campaign 7. The Grammar of
Terror 7.1. Responsibility and Participation 7.2. Participation and
Discourse 7.3. Participation in a Bureaucratic Procedure 7.4.
Participants-How did They Get There? 7.5. Openness and Legitimacy 7.6. The
Importance of War 7.7. A Grammar of Terror? Appendixes, Bibliography,
Index.
