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E-raamat: Unfound Peace: Disabled Veterans in Interwar Soviet Union

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"This book focuses on disabled former servicemen with regards to socioeconomic status, healthcare, social reintegration into families and communities, and self-representation and compares WWI and Russian Civil War veterans"--

The Unfound Peace is the first book dealing with disabled former servicemen of tsarist Russia in all regards—socioeconomic status, healthcare, social reintegration into families and communities, self-representation—and the only one comparing World War I and Russian Civil War veterans. Alexandre Sumpf considers the ways disabled Great War veterans tried to live under the Bolsheviks and compares their experiences with those of the Red Army veterans who received special considerations from the new regime.

Offering a history of the body and health in relation to work, The Unfound Peace also compares the situation of disabled veterans with that of disabled workers who were subject to the same demands of extreme productivity but benefited from better social protection, though they dealt with accusations that they were faking their disabilities.

Sumpf's exploration of disabled veterans, with transnational comparisons, offers the possibility of rereading the history of the first generation of Soviets through the collective and private memory of war, in the USSR and in exile.

Arvustused

Sumpf manages to make the experiences of the disabled legible in a rich but diffuse archival record, countering systematic Bolshevik attempts to erase physical and mental suffering. * Russian Review * Russia in the twentieth century is one of the most productive sites to raise these questions: arguably few other countries have undergone so much change and produced so many disabled bodyminds in the span of a century, which makes Sumpf's book not just a well-researched case study but also, potentially, a model for integrating disability more fully in other national histories. * European History Quarterly * This new monograph provides an interpretively rich account of disabled veterans of the Great War in the interwar Soviet Union. Sumpf draws from an impressive breadth of sources, including a wealth of archival documents, published materials, and veterans' accounts, to craft a highly readable history. * Choice *

Introduction
1. A New Class of Citizens (19141919)
2. Civil War as a Dead End (19181923)
3. Ascribing Identity to "Victims of the Imperialist War"
4. Thou Shalt Work
5. Useful Bodies, Perfectible Minds
6. Showcasing Disability
Conclusion
Alexandre Sumpf is Assistant Professor at Strasbourg University in France and Head of the Institute for the Contemporary History. His scholarship includes studies about wars in Russia/USSR, health history, disability studies, and propaganda.