Borderland: A Journey through the History of Ukraine

Author: Anna Reid
Publisher: W&N
Year of Publication: 1997 (First Edition), 2022 (This Edition)
Print Length: 400 pages
Genre: Non-Fiction / History, Travel Writing, Political Science
Area: Ukraine, Soviet Union
Topic: History, Cultural Heritage/Legacy, Culture & Society, Testimonies, Geopolitics, Politics & Power, Borders, Conflict, Crimes, War, Democracy, Dictatorship, Refugees & Forced Migration, Victimhood
‘A fascinating and often violent odyssey, spanning more than 1,000 years of conflict and culture’ ― INDEPENDENT
Flat, fertile, and fatally tempting to invaders, for centuries Ukraine was fought over by more powerful neighbours. Though its modern national movement dates back to the early nineteenth century, it did not win real independence until 1991, with the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Since then, Ukrainians have proved themselves one of the world’s most remarkable nations. In 2014 mass demonstrations forced out a corrupt pro-Russian president. Russia responded by invading, first seizing Crimea and the eastern Donbass, and then in February 2022 marching on Kyiv. With Western help, Ukraine is fighting back. But in what form it will emerge from the war – the bloodiest in Europe since 1945 – remains to be seen.
For this fourth edition of her classic history, Anna Reid returns to the scene. Talking to refugees, politicians and victims of widespread Russian war crimes, she adds a new chapter to the complex biography of a country on the frontline of the conflict between democracy and dictatorship.
‘Beautifully written and lovingly researched … This book brims with colourful historical personalities … The mixture of travelogue, history, political analysis and anecdote makes Anna Reid’s account a highly digestible popular introduction to the tragic plight of a country whose very name means “Borderland”. “The West … had difficulty taking Ukraine seriously at all,” she writes. Her first (and I hope not her last) book is a noble and praiseworthy attempt to correct this gross historical injustice.’ ― Daily Telegraph
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Note on Place-names
Chronology
Preface to 2022 Edition
PART ONE
1. The New Jerusalem: Kiev
2. Poles and Cossacks: Kamyanets Podilsky
3. The Russian Sea: Donetsk and Odessa
4. The Books of Genesis: Lviv
5. A Meaningless Fragments: Chernivtsi
6. The Great Hunger: Matussiv and Lukovytsya
7. The Vanished Nation: Ivano-Frankivsk
8. The Wart on Russia’s Nose: Crimea
9. The Empire Explodes: Chernobyl
10. Europe or Little Russia? Ukraina
PART TWO
11. The Rise and Fall of the Orange Revolution
12. The Maidan
13. Putin Strikes Back
14. Between Battles
15. The New War
16. What Next?
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index

Anna Reid is an English journalist and whose work focuses primarily on the history of Eastern Europe. She holds a law degree from Oxford, and a master’s in Russian history from London University’s School of Slavonic and East European Studies. She was Kiev correspondent for the Economist and the Daily Telegraph from 1993-1995, and from 2002-6 she ran the foreign affairs programme of the think-tank Policy Exchange. Her first book, Borderland: A Journey through the History of the Ukraine, was published to wide acclaim in 1997. She is also the author of The Shaman’s Coat: A Native History of Siberia and most recently Leningrad: Tragedy of a City under Siege, 1941-44. The Russia Stunt is forthcoming from John Murray. She lives in London.
Source: https://www.rcwlitagency.com/authors/reid-anna/
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