Historiography

Charles J. Halperin, “Omissions of National Memory: Russian Historiography on the Golden Horde as Politics of Inclusion and Exclusion” Ab Imperio, 3/2004, pp. 131–144.  

Marina Mogilner, “On Cabbages, Kings, and Jews (Yuri Slezkine. The Jewish Century. Princeton, 2004)” Ab Imperio, 1/2005, pp. 137–150.  

Seymour Becker, “How Nineteenth-Century Russian Historians Interpreted the Period of Mongol Rule as a Largely Positive Experience in Nation-Building” Ab Imperio, 1/2006, pp. 155-176.  

Alla Zeide, “Creating a Space of Freedom: Mikhail Mikhailovich Karpovich and Studies of Russian History in the US” Ab Imperio, 1/2007, pp. 241-276.  

Document: “Michael Karpovich and Problems of Russian History and Historiography” Ab Imperio, 1/2007, pp. 277-307.

Andrzej Nowak, “A “Polish Connection” in American Sovietology, Or the Old Homeland Enmities in the New Host Country Humanities” Ab Imperio, 4/2007, pp. 237-259.  

Serguei Glebov, Alexander Semyonov, “The Arch of Thinking About Nationalism in Challenging Time” Ab Imperio, 1/2012, pp. 245-250.  

Document: “Hans Kohn: History: Its Place in a Liberal Education (Smith College, 1943)” Ab Imperio, 1/2012, pp. 273-288.

Jonathan Daly, “The Unknown Richard Pipes: On the Craft and Philosophy of History” Ab Imperio, 1/2019, pp. 237-265.  

“Documents from the Archive of Richard Pipes” Ab Imperio, 1/2019, pp. 266-296.

Patryk Babiracki, “Interfacing the Soviet Bloc: Recent Literature and New Paradigms” Ab Imperio, 4/2011, pp. 376-407.  

Kåre Johan Mjør, “A Past of One’s Own: The Post-Soviet Historiography of Russian Philosophy” Ab Imperio, 3/2013, pp. 315-350.  

Mikhail Suslov, “ “Urania Is Older than Sister Clio”: Discursive Strategies in Contemporary Russian Textbooks on Geopolitics” Ab Imperio, 3/2013, pp. 351-387.  

Andriy Zayarnyuk, “A Revolution’s History, A Historians’ War” Ab Imperio, 1/2015, pp. 449-479.  

Anton Kotenko, “Imagining Modern Ukraїnica” Ab Imperio, 1/2015, pp. 519-526.  

Serhy Yekelchyk, “National Heroes for a New Ukraine: Merging the Vocabularies of the Diaspora, Revolution, and Mass Culture” Ab Imperio, 3/2015, pp. 97-123.  

Alexander Semyonov, “How Five Empires Shaped the World and How This Process Shaped Those Empires” Ab Imperio, 4/2017, pp. 27-51.  

Krishan Kumar, “Response to Alexander Semyonov” Ab Imperio, 4/2017, pp. 52-63.  

Korine Amacher, “Mikhail N. Pokrovsky and Ukraine: A Normative Marxist between History and Politics” Ab Imperio, 1/2018, pp. 101-132.  

Oksana Myshlovska, “Establishing the "Irrefutable Facts" about the OUN and UPA: The Role of the Working Group of Historians on OUN-UPA Activities in Mediating Memory-based Conflict in Ukraine” Ab Imperio, 1/2018, pp. 223-254.  

Serguei Glebov, “Center, Periphery, and Diversity in the Late Imperial Far East: New Historiography of a Russian Region” Ab Imperio, 3/2019, pp. 265-278. 

Marko Robert Stech, “One of the Galician Cohort of 1919: George Luckyj’s Contribution to Ukrainian Studies in North America” Ab Imperio, 1/2020, pp. 253-276. 

Frank Sysyn, “Omeljan Pritsak and the Establishment of Ukrainian Studies at Harvard: The Vision and the Actuality” Ab Imperio, 1/2020, pp. 277-300. 

Iaroslav Hrytsak, “Ivan Lysiak Rudnytsky: Historian, Public Figure, and Political Thinker” Ab Imperio, 1/2020, pp. 301-322. 

Sergey Glebov, Marina Mogilner, “Seymour Becker: Toward a Genealogy of Nationalizing Empire” Ab Imperio, 3/2020, pp. 195-202. 

Seymour Becker, “Chapter Four: Projects for Political Reform in the First Quarter of the Nineteenth Century” Ab Imperio, 3/2020, pp. 203-227. 

Seymour Becker, “Chapter Five: Nationalism and the Borderlands in the Reign of Nicholas I” Ab Imperio, 3/2020, pp. 228-257. 

Seymour Becker, “Chapter Six: The Era of the Great Reforms (I): Centralization and the Nation as the Basis of the State” Ab Imperio, 42020, pp. 193-253. 

Seymour Becker, “Chapter Seven: The Era of the Great Reforms (II): Constitutional Projects; Poland and Finland” Ab Imperio, 1/2021, pp. 185-234. 

Ilya Gerasimov, “Narrating Russian History after the Imperial Turn” Ab Imperio, 4/2020, pp. 21-61.  

Andriy Portnov, Tetiana Portnova, Serhii Savchenko, Viktoriia Serhiienko, “Whose Language Do We Speak? Some Reflections on the Master Narrative of Ukrainian History Writing” Ab Imperio, 4/2020, pp. 88-129.  

 Marina Mogilner, “There Can Be No 'Vne'” Ab Imperio, 4/2021, pp. 24-26. 

Ilya Gerasimov, “A New Soviet History: An Editor's Observations Thirty Years after the USSR” Ab Imperio, 4/2021, pp. 27-54. 

Yaroslav Hrytsak, “What Do We Write about When We Write about Ukraine?” Ab Imperio, 1/2022, pp. 51-64. 

Forum AI “Debating Historical Narratives through the Prism of Russia’s War against Ukraine” 

Editors, “Invitation to a Discussion” Ab Imperio, 1/2022, pp. 65-68. 

Andy Byford, “Russia as an Epistemic Frame” Ab Imperio, 1/2022, pp. 73-84.  

Jörg Requate, “The War against Ukraine, the Problem of Communication Strategies, and Its Challenges for European Historiography” Ab Imperio, 1/2022, pp. 85-90.  

Martin Schulze Wessel, “The Concept of Empire and German Sonderwege in the Historical Debate about Ukraine” Ab Imperio, 1/2022, pp. 91-100. 

Martin Aust, “Vision and Horror: Eastern European History in Germany from the Fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 to Russia’s Attack on Ukraine in 2022” Ab Imperio, 1/2022, pp. 101-106. 

Anke Hilbrenner, “Eastern European History In Germany As A Discipline, Or: Transnational Historiography in Times of War” Ab Imperio, 1/2022, pp. 107-114. 

Botakoz Kassymbekova, “On Decentering Soviet Studies and Launching New Conversations” Ab Imperio, 1/2022, pp. 115-120. 

Tomohiko Uyama, “Unmasking imperial history: Emotional Empire, Violent Politics of Difference, and Independence Movements in the Name of Autonomy” Ab Imperio, 1/2022, pp. 121-126.

Willard Sunderland, “Of Imperialisms Soft, Hard, and Complicated” Ab Imperio, 1/2022, pp. 127-131. 

Oksana Dudko, “Teaching Ukrainian History in Canada” Ab Imperio, 1/2023, pp. 223-233.

Vladyslava Moskalets, “How to Teach about Ukraine during the War: Notes in the Syllabus Margins” Ab Imperio, 1/2023, pp. 234-242.