Soviet Jews under Late Stalinism: A Story from the Western Borderlands
How did Soviet Jews rebuild their lives after the Holocaust? How did they navigate Stalinist rule, reclaim their place in society, and seek retribution against those responsible for wartime atrocities? This study uncovers the resilience and adaptability of Soviet Jews in postwar Moldavia, a borderland where identities were fluid, loyalties were tested, and survival demanded ingenuity. Using newly accessed archives and oral histories, Diana Dumitru reveals how Jews pursued professional success, resisted discrimination, and sought vengeance on their wrongdoers. Far from passive subjects of repression, they carved out spaces for agency in an era of contradictions – between social mobility and state-imposed limitations, between the Soviet promise of equality and the rising anti-Jewish drive of the early 1950s, and between ideological control and personal ambition. In doing so, this study offers a fresh perspective on a complex, understudied chapter of 20th-century history.
1148264264
Soviet Jews under Late Stalinism: A Story from the Western Borderlands
How did Soviet Jews rebuild their lives after the Holocaust? How did they navigate Stalinist rule, reclaim their place in society, and seek retribution against those responsible for wartime atrocities? This study uncovers the resilience and adaptability of Soviet Jews in postwar Moldavia, a borderland where identities were fluid, loyalties were tested, and survival demanded ingenuity. Using newly accessed archives and oral histories, Diana Dumitru reveals how Jews pursued professional success, resisted discrimination, and sought vengeance on their wrongdoers. Far from passive subjects of repression, they carved out spaces for agency in an era of contradictions – between social mobility and state-imposed limitations, between the Soviet promise of equality and the rising anti-Jewish drive of the early 1950s, and between ideological control and personal ambition. In doing so, this study offers a fresh perspective on a complex, understudied chapter of 20th-century history.
130.0 Pre Order
Soviet Jews under Late Stalinism: A Story from the Western Borderlands

Soviet Jews under Late Stalinism: A Story from the Western Borderlands

by Diana Dumitru
Soviet Jews under Late Stalinism: A Story from the Western Borderlands

Soviet Jews under Late Stalinism: A Story from the Western Borderlands

by Diana Dumitru

Hardcover

$130.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Available for Pre-Order. This item will be released on April 30, 2026

Related collections and offers


Overview

How did Soviet Jews rebuild their lives after the Holocaust? How did they navigate Stalinist rule, reclaim their place in society, and seek retribution against those responsible for wartime atrocities? This study uncovers the resilience and adaptability of Soviet Jews in postwar Moldavia, a borderland where identities were fluid, loyalties were tested, and survival demanded ingenuity. Using newly accessed archives and oral histories, Diana Dumitru reveals how Jews pursued professional success, resisted discrimination, and sought vengeance on their wrongdoers. Far from passive subjects of repression, they carved out spaces for agency in an era of contradictions – between social mobility and state-imposed limitations, between the Soviet promise of equality and the rising anti-Jewish drive of the early 1950s, and between ideological control and personal ambition. In doing so, this study offers a fresh perspective on a complex, understudied chapter of 20th-century history.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781009671507
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 04/30/2026
Series: New Studies in European History
Pages: 320
Product dimensions: 6.50(w) x 1.50(h) x 9.50(d)

About the Author

Diana Dumitru is Ion Ratiu Professor in Romanian Studies at Georgetown University. Her research explores the entangled histories of violence, ideology, and identity in Eastern Europe. Dumitru is the author of The State, Antisemitism, and Collaboration in the Holocaust: The Borderlands of Romania and the Soviet Union (2016) and serves as an Editor of the Journal of Genocide Research.

Table of Contents

Introduction; 1. The return; 2. Jewish social mobility in the newly sovietizing periphery; 3. 'Life in Romania was better than in the Soviet Union': how Bessarabian Jews tried (and Frequently Failed) to become dutiful soviet citizens; 4. Seeking revenge and justice after the holocaust; 5. Fighting antisemitism in its manyfold forms; 6. From starry skies to the abyss: Jewish national dreams after 1948; Epilogue; Bibliography; Index.
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews