Leipzig Studies, Volume 5 (2007)
Map
Dan Diner: Preface
Elazar Barkan, Elizabeth A. Cole, Kai Struve: Introduction
I. Memory and Historiography
Kai Struve: Eastern Experience and Western Memory – 1939–1941 as a Paradigm of European Memory Conflicts
Joanna B. Michlic: Anit-Polish and Pro-Soviet? 1939–1941 and the Stereotyping of the Jew in Polish Historiography
Wilfried Jilge: Competing Victimhoods – Post-Soviet Ukrainian Narratives on World War II
II. Soviet Rule
Marek Wierzbicki: Western Belarus in September 1939: Revisiting Polish-Jewish Relations
Rafa? Wnuk: Resistance 1939–1941: The Polish Underground under Soviet Occupation and the Jews
Grzegorz Hryciuk: Victims 1939 – 1941: The Soviet Repressions in Eastern Poland
Evgenii Rozenblat: »Contact Zones« in Interethnic Relations – The Case of Western Belarus, 1939–1941
Alexander Brakel: Was there a »Jewish Collaboration« under Soviet Occupation? A Case Study from the Baranowicze Region
Christoph Mick: »Only the Jews do not waver…« – L'viv under Soviet Occupation
Marco Carynnyk: The Palace on the Ikva – Dubne, September eighteenth, 1939 and June twenty fourth, 1941
III. Pogroms
Dieter Pohl: Anti-Jewish Pogroms in Western Ukraine – A Research Agenda
Andrzej ?bikowski: Pogroms in Northeastern Poland – Spontaneous Reactions and German Instigations
Christoph Dieckmann: Lithuania in Summer 1941 – The German Invasion and the Kaunas Pogrom