Publications Catalog
Ukrainian Studies Fund Publications |

From Kievan Rus' to Modern Ukraine: The Formation of the
Ukrainian Nation
In the articles "The Traditional Scheme
of 'Russian' History and the Problem of a
Rational Organization of the History of
the Eastern Slavs" by the great Ukrainian
historian Myxajlo Hrushevs'kij and in
"Ukraine and the Dialectics of
Nation-Building" by Omeljan Pritsak and
John Reshetar, the historical dimension of
the question of Ukrainian national
identity is addressed. These articles
challenge the traditional Russian
nationalist historiographic practice of
using "Russia" as a designation for states
and cultures as diverse as tenth-century
Kievan Rus' and the twentieth-century
Soviet Union. Introduction by James
Cracraft.
40 pp. ISBN
0-9609822-2-1 (pamphlet) (HURI)
$1.00
The Catacomb Ukrainian Catholic Church
and Pope John Paul II.
Ivan Hvat
This booklet contains an article by
Ivan Hvat, a number of documents from
Ukrainian Catholics in the USSR, and the
letter of John Paul II calling for the
celebration of the Ukrainian Millennium.
In his article "The Ukrainian Catholic
Church, the Vatican and the Soviet Union
during the Pontificate of Pope John Paul
II," Ivan Hvat analyzes the stimulating
effects of John Paul II's pontificate on
Ukrainian Catholics in the USSR and the
Soviet propaganda campaign against the
pope. The documents provide a detailed
picture of the struggle of Ukrainian
Catholics for religious freedom in the
Soviet Union.
30 pp. ISBN 0-9609822-5-6 (pamphlet) (HURI)
$1.00
Byzantine Roots of Ukrainian Christianity.
Ihor Sevcenko
Under the Byzantine Christian influence, Kyivan Rus' flourished
spiritually and culturally, producing important contributions to
art, literature, and architecture in a short time. The two articles
presented here, "The Christianization of Kievan Rus'" and "Byzantine
Elements in Early Ukrainian Culture," explore the historical circumstances
and impact of the conversion of Rus' and describe the position
of Kyivan Rus' among Christian nations in the tenth century.
26 pp. ISBN 0-9609822-4-8 (pamphlet) (HURI)
$1.00
The Many Worlds of Peter Mohyla.
Ihor Sevcenko
In the seventeenth century, Ukrainian Orthodox learning and institutions
made Kyiv an intellectual center of the Orthodox world. The second
quarter of that century has often been called the age of Mohyla,
in honor of Peter Mohyla, who devoted himself to the revival and
reform of Orthodoxy in the metropolitan see of Kyiv. No aspect
of ecclesiastical or cultural life remained untouched by this churchman,
but his greatest achievement was the establishment of the Kyiv
Collegian (later Academy) that bore his name. In 1984, to commemorate
the 350th anniversary of the founding of the Kyiv Mohyla Academy,
Harvard Ukrainian Studies published a special issue devoted to
the school and its founder. The included article is from that issue;
in the article, Professor Sevcenko demonstrates how Eastern and
Western Christianity; the Latin, Greek, Slavonic, Ruthenian, and
Polish literary traditions; and Romanian, Ukrainian, and Polish
cultures all met in the person of the great metropolitan and in
the Kyiv of his time.
44 pp. ISBN 0-9609822-7-2 (pamphlet) (HURI)
$1.00
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