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Bibliography for 1993

Canadian Publications on the Former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe for 1993

Pages 473-498 | Published online: 14 Apr 2015

Bibliographies, Documents, General, and Miscellaneous

  • BLACK, J. L. “From Coup to Commonwealth” [Introduction]. In Into the Dustbin of History: the USSR from Coup to Commonwealth, August-December 1991: a Documentary Narrative, ed. J. L. BLACK. Gulf Breeze, FL: Academic International. Pp. 1-64.
  • BRYM, Robert J., and Andrei Degtyarev. “Anti-Semitism in Moscow: Results of an October 1992 Survey.” Slavic Review 52.1: 1-12.
  • CUTLER, Robert. “A Rediscovered Source on Bakunin in 1861: The Diary of F. P. Кое and [Excerpts from the Diary of F. P. Кое].” CSP 35.1/2: 121-30.
  • DREISZIGER, N. F., ed. and Intro. “Documents: The 1956 Hungarian Student Movement in Exile: An Introduction.” Hungarian Studies Review 20.1/2: 103-16.
  • GREGOROVICH, Andrew. “Books on the Scythians.” Forum: A Ukrainian Review 88: 5-9.
  • KLASSEN, Walter, trans. “Concerning Intermarriage: A Dutch-Mennonite Admonition to the Russian Mennonites, 1788.” Introduction by Harry LOEWEN. Journal of Mennonite Studies 11: 98-110.
  • KRAWCHENKO, Bohdan, ed. Ukrainian Past, Ukrainian Present: Selected Papers from the Fourth World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies, Harrogate, 1990. New York: St. Martin’s.
  • LONGWORTH, Philip. “1989 and After.” [Review Article] Slavonic and East European Review 71.4: 701-11.
  • MAGOCSI, Paul Robert. Historical Atlas of East Central Europe. Cartographic design by Geoffrey J. MATTHEWS. History of East Central Europe 1. Toronto: University of Toronto Press; Seattle: University of Washington Press.
  • _. “Die Russinen: Ihr gegenwärtiger Status und ihre Zukunfts-perspektiven.” Osteuropa [Berlin] 42.9: 809-24.
  • MAKARYK, Irena R., general ed. and сотр. Encyclopedia of Contemporary Literary Theory: Approaches, Scholars, Terms. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • MAXIMENKOV, Leonid. “Document: Stalin’s Meeting with a Delegation of Ukrainian Writers on 12 February 1929.” Harvard Ukrainian Studies 16.3/4 (1992): 361-431.
  • MCERLEAN, John M. P. “Foreword.” In Essays for Yvonne Grabowski, ed. John M. P. MCERLEAN. Toronto: Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences in Canada. Pp. v-vii.
  • MCINTOSH, Jack, and Connie WAWRUCK-HEMMETT. “Canadian Publications on the Former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe for 1992.” CSP 35.3/4: 345-84.
  • MILLER, Stefania Szlek. “W(h)ither Slavic Studies?” CAS Newsletter 33.80 (Spring): 13-14. [Script of presentation to the Canadian Association of Slavists, Annual Meeting Plenary Session, 2 June 1992.]
  • RAYMOND, Boris, and K. ADAMS. “Former Eastern Bloc Librarianship in Transition: Hungary, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia.” Canadian Journal of Information and Library Science 18.3: 36-50.
  • SEMOTIUK, IAroslav. Ukrainski viiskovi vidznaky: ordeny, khresty, medali ta nashyvky. Kanads’ke naukove tovarystvo im. Shevchenka v Kanadi 34. Toronto: NTSH, 1991. [Also in English: Ukrainian Military Medals: Orders, Crosses, Badges and Emblems.]
  • SERBYN, Roman. “Holod 1921-1923: vybrana bibliohrafiia.” In his Holod 1921-1923: ukrainska presa v Kanadi. Toronto: Ukrainian Canadian Research and Documentation Centre; Kyiv: Instytut ukrainskoi arkheohrafii Akademii nauk Ukrainy. Pp. 697-700.
  • STRUK, Danylo Husar, general ed. Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Vols. III-V. Toronto: University of Toronto Press; published for the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies, the Shevchenko Scientific Society (Sarcelles, France) and the Canadian Foundation for Ukrainian Studies.
  • VERYHA, Wasyl. “Soviet Union versus Russia as a Subject Heading in the Library of Congress.” Ukrainian Quarterly 46.4 (1990): 421-27.

The Arts and Popular Culture

  • BAHRY, Romana M. “The Satirical Content in Popular Youth Culture: Rock Music and Film in Ukraine in the 1990s.” In Ukraine in the 1990s: Proceedings of the First Conference of the Ukrainian Studies Association of Australia, Monash University, 24-26 January 1992, ed. Marko Pavlyshyn and J. E. M. Clarke. Melbourne: Monash University, Slavic Section, 1992. Pp. 146-64.
  • CLAYTON, J. Douglas. Pierrot in Petrograd: Commedia dell’Artel Balagan in Twentieth-Century Russian Theatre and Drama. Montreal/Kingston: McGill-Queen’sUP.
  • LEDGER, Joanne. “Boris Ravenskikh’s Staging of L. N. Tolstoi’s The Power of Darkness: Some Echoes of the Avant-Garde During the Thaw.” CSP 35.3/4: 261-74.
  • MAKARYK, Lena R. ‘“Woman Scorned’: Antony and Cleopatra at Moscow’s Vakhtangov Theatre.” In Foreign Shakespeare, ed. Dennis Kennedy. Cambridge: Cambridge UP. Pp. 178-94.
  • PASCZAK-TRACZ, Orysia, trans. Ukrains’kyi narodnyi odiah = Ukrainian Folk Costume, ed. Petro Odarchenko and Halyna Carynnyk. Toronto: Svitova Federatsiia Ukr. ZHinochykh Orhanizatsii, Komisiia Narodnoho Mystetstva, 1992.
  • SATORY, Stephen. “Bártok and Kodály: A Parting of the Ways.” Hungarian Studies Review 19.1/2 (1992): 59-68.
  • STEBELSKY, Bohdan, I dei i tvorchist: zbirnyk stattei ta eseiv. Kanadske naukove tovarystvo im. Shevchenka 32. Toronto: [Homin Ukrainy], 1991.
  • TUMANOV, Alexander N. “Correspondence of Literary Text and Musical Phraseology in Shostakovich’s Opera The Nose and Gogol’s Fantastic Tale.” Russian Review 52.3: 397-414.
  • ZELSKA-DAREWYCH, Daria. “Landscape Art.” Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Vol. 3: 33-35.

Economics, Geography and Geology

  • ADAM, Jan. Planning and Market in Soviet and East European Thought 1960s- 1992. New York: St. Martin’s.
  • CARSON, Richard L. Comparative Economic Systems. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 1990. [Includes Yugoslavia.]
  • CECILE, M. P., J. C. HARRISON, et al. Geology of Wrangel Island, Between Chukchi and East Siberian Seas, Northeastern Russia. Geological Survey of Canada Bulletin 461. Ottawa: Energy, Mines and Resources Canada.
  • CHUCHMAN, George. “Essential Macroeconomic and Microeconomic Policies for the Economic Transformation of Ukraine.” In Ekonomika Ukrainy: mynule, suchasne i maibutne - The Economy of Ukraine: Past, Present and Future, ed. George CHUCHMAN and Mykola Herasymchuk. Kiev: Naukova dumka. Pp. 30-46.
  • DZUS, Roman, and Gerald ROMSA. “The Role of Regional Economic Development Agencies Modernizing the Ukrainian Economy.” In Ibid., pp. 349-55.
  • FLAKIERSKI, Henryk. Income Inequalities in the Former Soviet Union and Its Republics. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe.
  • GIBSON, James R. “The Rush to Meet the Sun: An Essay on Russian Eastward Expansion.” Siberica 1.1 (1990): 68-77.
  • HRYNIUK, Stella. “The Economic Development of Eastern Galicia in Late Austrian Time: Some Agendas for Future Work.” In Ekonomika Ukrainy: mynule, suchasne i maibutne = The Economy of Ukraine: Past, Present and Future, ed. George CHUCHMAN and Mykola Herasymchuk. Kiev: Naukova dumka. Pp. 275-90.
  • KOSTASH, Myrna. Bloodlines: A Journey into Eastern Europe. Vancouver: Douglas & Mclntyre.
  • MARPLES, David R. “Ukraine, Russia and the Current Energy Crisis.” In Ekonomika Ukrainy: mynule, suchasne i maibutne = The Economy of Ukraine: Past, Present and Future, ed. George CHUCHMAN and Mykola Herasymchuk. Kiev: Naukova dumka. Pp. 313-34.
  • MCMILLAN, Carl H. Canada-USSR Joint Ventures: A Survey and Analytical Review. Toronto: Canada-USSR Business Council, 1991.
  • _. Soviet and East European Economies in Transition: Implications for China and the Pacific Region. Working paper 15. Ottawa: Asian Pacific Research and Resource Centre, Carleton University, 1992. [Outcome of a workshop organized by the Asian Pacific Research and Resource Centre and Centre for Trade Policy and Law; see following item.]
  • _. Workshop on Soviet and East European Economies in Transition: Implications for China and the Pacific Region. Seminar 3. Ottawa: Centre for Trade Policy and Law, 1992. [Proceedings of a workshop held March 5, 1992, Norman Paterson School of International Affairs.]
  • _, Patrick Artisien, and Matija Rojee. Yugoslav Multinationals Abroad. Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1992.
  • SAMONIS, Valdis, and Csilla Hunyadi. Big Bang and Acceleration: Models for the Postcommunist Economic Transformation. Commack, NY: Nova Science.
  • STEBELSKY, Ihor. “Ukrainian Migration to Siberia before 1917: The Process and Problems of Losses and Survival Rates.” In Ukrainian Past, Ukrainian Present: Selected Papers from the Fourth World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies, Harrogate, 1990, ed. Bohdan KRAWCHENKO. London: St. Martin’s/Macmillan. Pp. 55-69.
  • WOROBY, Peter. “Socio-economic Changes in the USSR and Their Impact on Ukrainians and Russians.” In Ukraine and Russia in Their Historical Encounter, ed. Peter J. POTICHNYJ, et al. Papers from the First Conference on Ukrainian-Russian Relations, 8-9 October 1981, Hamilton, ON. Edmonton: CIUS. Pp. 296-326.

Education, Health, and Sociology

  • BUYNIAK, Victor O. “Bat’ky, dity ta ukrains’ka shkola” [Parents, Children and the Ukrainian School]. Ternystyi Shliakh (Ternopil) 25.12: 6.
  • SOLOMON, Susan Gross. “The Soviet-German Syphilis Expedition to Buriat Mongolia, 1928: Scientific Research on National Minorities.” Slavic Review 52.2: 204-32.
  • Environmental and Ecological Studies
  • DEBARDELEBEN, Joan. “The New Politics in the USSR: the Case of the Environment.” In The Soviet Environment: Problems, Policies and Politics, ed. John Massey Stewart. International Council for Soviet and East European Studies. New York: Cambridge UP, 1992. Pp. 64-87.
  • MARPLES, David R. “Chernobyl’s Lengthening Shadow.” The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 49.7: 38-43.
  • _. “A Correlation Between Radiation and Health Problems in Belarus?” Post-Soviet Geography 35.5: 281-92.
  • _. “An Insider’s View of Chernobyl’: An Interview with Yurii Risovannyi.” In Ukraine: from Chernobyl to Sovereignty: A Collection of Interviews, ed. Roman Solchanyk. Edmonton: CIUS, 1992. Pp. 139-49.
  • _. “Introduction.” In Grigorii Medvedev, No Breathing Room: The Aftermath of Chernobyl. New York: Basic. Pp. 1-29.
  • _. “The Legacy of the Chernobyl Disaster in Belarus.” RFE/RL Research Report 2.5: 46-50.
  • _. “Nuclear Power Industry.” Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Vol. 3: 634-35.
  • ______. “The Post-Soviet Nuclear Power Program.” Post-Soviet Geography 34.3: 172-84.
  • _. “Ukraine, Belarus, and the Energy Dilemma.” Rfe/RL Research Report 2.27: 39-44.
  • _. “Ukraine, Russia, and the Current Energy Crisis.” In Ekonomika Ukrainy: mynule, suchasne i maibutne = The Economy of Ukraine: Past, Present and Future, ed. George CHUCHMAN and Mykola Herasymchuk. Kiev: Naukova dumka. Pp. 313-24.
  • _. “Zeleniy Svit.” Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Vol. 5: 835-36.

History

  • BERK, Eta Fuchs, with Gilbert ALLARDYCE. Chosen: A Holocaust Memoir. Fredericton: Goose Lane, 1992.
  • BOSÁK, Edita. “Czech-Slovak Relations from the 1840s to 1914.” Slovakia 35.64/65 (1991-92): 63-77.
  • HRYNIUK, Stella. “Polish Lords and Ukrainian Peasants: Conflict, Deference, and Accomodation in Eastern Galicia in the Late Nineteenth Century.” Austrian History Yearbook 24: 119-132.
  • MAGOCSI, Paul Robert [Philip Michaels]. “Antal Hodinka (1864-1946).” Carpatho-Rusyn American 16.1: 3.
  • _. “Prešov region.” “Slovaks.” Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Vol. 4: 188-96; 760-61.
  • _____. The Rusyns of Slovakia: an Historical Survey. Classics of Carpatho-Rusyn Scholarship 6. New York: Columbia UP/East European Quarterly.
  • _. “The Ukrainian Question Between Poland and Czechoslovakia: The Lemko Rusyn Republic (1918-1920) and Political Thought in Western Rus’-Ukraine.” Nationalities Papers2\.2: 95-105.
  • MCERLEAN, John M. P. “The Polish Question at the Congress of Vienna: C. A. Pozzo di Borgo’s Memorandum of 1814.” In Essays for Yvonne Grabowski, ed. John M. P. MCERLEAN. Toronto: Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences in Canada. Pp. 85-112.
  • _. “Waterloo raconté par Pozzo di Borgo.” Revue de l’institut Napoléon 160.1: 61-76.
  • MOŻEJKO, Edward. “Wierność i cierpienie: о Polakach w Zwiqzku Sowieckim przed 1939r” [Faithfulness and Suffering: Poles in the Soviet Union before 1939]. Zeszyty historyczne 100 (1992): 3-22.
  • PERNAL, Andrew B. “Echoes of the 3 May 1791 Polish Constitution in the Contemporary Canadian Press.” Parliaments, Estates & Representation [Great Britain] 13.1: 65-74.
  • STOLARIK, M. Mark. “Marxist Historians in Search of Slovak History.” Slovakia 35.64/65 (1991-92): 119-22.
  • STONE, Daniel. “The First (and Only) Year of the May 3 Constitution.” CSP 35.1/2: 69-86.
  • _. “Jews and the Urban Question in Late 18th-Century Poland.” Slavic Review 50.3 (1992): 531-42.
  • TELEKY, Richard. “The Archives of St. Elizabeth of Hungary.” Ethnic Forum 13.1: 53-64.
  • TERLES, Mikolaj, ed. Ethnic Cleansing of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia 1942-1946. S.l.: Alliance of the Polish Eastern Provinces.
  • VELYCHENKO, Stephen. National History as Cultural Process: A Survey of the Interpretations of Ukraine’s Past in Polish, Russian, and Ukrainian Historical Writing from the Earliest Times to 1914. Edmonton: CIUS, 1992.
  • _. Shaping Identity in Eastern Europe and Russia: Soviet-Russian and Polish Accounts of Ukrainian History, 1914-1991. New York: St. Martin’s.
  • AKSAN, Virginia. “One-Eyed Fighting the Blind: Mobilization, Supply, and Command in the Russo-Turkish War of 1768-1774.” International History Review 15.2: 221-38.
  • ARGENBRIGHT, Robert. “Bolsheviks, Baggers and Railroaders: Political Power and Social Space, 1917-1921.” Russian Review 52.4: 506-28.
  • BARRATT, Glynn. Russia and the South Pacific, 1696-1840. Vol. 4: The Tuamotu Islands and Tahiti. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 1992.
  • BLACK, J. L. “Rediscovering Siberia in the Eighteenth Century: G. F. Müller and the ‘Monthly Compositions’, 1755-1764.” Siberica 1.2 (1990-91): 112-26.
  • CARLEY, Michael Jabara. “End of the ‘Low, Dishonest Decade’: Failure of the Anglo-Franco-Soviet Alliance in 1939.” Europe-Asia Studies 45.2: 303-41.
  • _. “Five Kopecks for Five Kopecks: Franco-Soviet Trade Relations, 1928-1939.” Cahiers du Monde Russe et Soviétique 33.1 (1992): 2358.
  • CHOJNOWSKI, Andrei, and Piotr WROBEL, eds. Prezydenci i premierzy Drugiej Rzeczypospolitej [Presidents and Prime Ministers of the Second Republic]. Wroclaw: Zakład Narodowy im. Ossolińskich, 1992.
  • DIMNIK, Martin. “Oleg’s Status as Ruler of Tmutarakan’: The Sphragistic Evidence.” Mediaeval Studies 55: 137-49.
  • GREGOROVICH, Andrew. “Scythia: Ancient Ukraine.” Forum: A Ukrainian Review 88: 3-4.
  • HIMKA, John-Paul. “The Galician Triangle.” Cross Currents 12: 125-146.
  • _. “Nationality Problems in the Habsburg Monarchy and Soviet Union: The Perspective of History.” In Nationalism and Empire: The Habsburg Empire and the Soviet Union, ed. Richard L. Rudolph and David F. Good. New York: St. Martin’s, in association with the Center for Austrian Studies, University of Minnesota, 1992. Pp. 79-93.
  • _. “Stratificazione sociale e movimento nazionale Ucraino nella Gallizia dell’ottocento” [Social stratification and the Ukrainian national movement in 19th-century Galicia]. Trans. Angelo Torre. Quaderni Storici [Italy] 28.3: 657-678.
  • JOHNSON, Robert Eugene. Contadini e proletari: la classe lavoratrice moscovita alla fine dell’800. Bologna: Societa edititrice il Mulino.
  • KEEP, John. “No Gauntlet for Gentlemen. Officers’ Privileges in Russian Military Law: 1716-1855. Cahiers du Monde Russe et Soviétique [France] 34.1-2 (1993): 171-192.
  • KNYSH, George D. “The Crimean Roots of Ancient Ukrainian Statehood.” Ukrainian Quarterly 49.3: 294-317. [Continued 50.2 (1994): 223.]
  • _. “Krym i starodavnia ukrains’ka derzhavnist’.” Ukrains’kyi istoryk 30.1-4: 58-77.
  • _. Taiemnytsia pochatkovoi Rusy v Kyievi. Winnipeg: Ukrainian Academy of Arts and Sciences in Canada (UVAN), 1991.
  • _, ed. Leonid BILETS’KYI. Rus’ka Pravda i istoriia ii tekstu = The Ruska Pravda and Its Textual History. Winnipeg: Ukrainian Academy of Arts and Sciences in Canada (UVAN).
  • MAGOCSI, Paul Robert. “Commentary.” In The Persistance of Regional Cultures: Rusyns and Ukrainians in Their Carpathian Homeland and Abroad, ed. Paul Robert MAGOCSI. Classics of Carpatho-Rusyn Scholarship 5. New York: Columbia UP/East European Quarterly. Pp. 191-202.
  • _. “Supreme Ruthenian Council.” Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Vol. 4: 109.
  • MANDEL, David. “October in the Ivanovo-Kineshma Industrial Region.” In Revolution in Russia: Reassessments of 1917, ed. Edith Rogovin Frankel, Jonathan Frankel, and Baruch Knei-Paz. New York: Cambridge Up, 1992.
  • MARPLES, David R. “New Interpretations of Ukrainian History.” RFE/RL Research Bulletin 2.11: 57-60.
  • PIRIE, Paul. “Mykhailo Hrushevs’kyi’s Historical Methodology.” Past Imperfect 2: 49-61.
  • REIMER, Al. “Sanitätsdienst and Selbstschutz: Russian-Mennonite Nonresistance in World War I and Its Aftermath.” Journal of Mennonite Studies 11: 135-148.
  • REMPEL, David G. “Mennonite Medics in Russia in World War I.” Ed. Abe DUECK. Ibid.: 149-61.
  • RUUD, Charles A., and S. A. Stepanov. Fontanka, 16: Politicheskii sysk pri tsariakh. Moskva: Mysl’.
  • SCHAPANSKY, Henry. “Einlage: The Old Colony Russia; The First Settlers: 1788-1808.” Mennonite Family History (Jan. 1991): 266-31; (Apr. 1991): 74-78.
  • _. “Neuendorf, The Old Colony Russia: The First Settlers: 17881808, Parti.” Ibid. (Oct. 1991): 148-55.
  • _. “Neuendorf, The Old Colony Russia: The First Settlers: 17881808, Part II.” Ibid. (Jan. 1992): 28-32.
  • _. “Rosenthal, The Old Colony Russia: The First Settlers: 17881808, Part I.” Ibid. (Jul. 1992): 112-19.
  • _. “Rosenthal, The Old Colony Russia: The First Settlers: 17881808, Part II.” Ibid. (Oct. 1992): 166-71.
  • _. “Schönhorst, The Old Colony Russia: The First Settlers: 17881803, Part I.” Ibid. (Jul. 1993): 111-17.
  • _. “Schönhorst, The Old Colony Russia: The First Settlers: 17881806, Part II.” Ibid. (Oct. 1993): 178-83.
  • SERBYN, Roman. Holod 1921-1923: ukrainska presa v Kanadi. Toronto: Ukrainian Canadian Research and Documentation Centre; Kyiv: Instytut ukrainskoi arkheohrafii Akademii nauk Ukrainy.
  • SLAVUTYCH, Yar. “The Famine of 1932-1933 in the Ukrainian Literature Abroad.” Ukrainian Quarterly 49.2: 165-83.
  • SUBTELNY, Orest. Ukraina: istoriia. Pereklad z anhliis’koi Iurka Shevchuka; vstupna stattia S. V. Kul’chyts’koho. Kyiv: Lybid’, 1991.
  • SYSYN, Frank E. “The Khmelnytsky Uprising and Ukrainian Nation-Building.” Journal of Ukrainian Studies 17.1/2(1992): 141-70.
  • TOEWS, John B. A Pilgrimage of Faith: the Mennonite Brethren in Russia and North America, 1860-1990. Winnipeg: Kindred.
  • VELYCHENKO, Stephen. National History as Cultural Process: A Survey of the Interpretations of Ukraine’s Past in Polish, Russian, and Ukrainian Historical Writing from the Earliest Times to 1914. Edmonton: CIUS, 1992.
  • _. Shaping Identity in Eastern Europe and Russia: Soviet-Russian and Polish Accounts of Ukrainian History, 1914-1991. New York: St. Martin’s.
  • VIOLA, Lynne. “The Second Coming: Class Enemies in the Soviet Countryside, 1927-1935.” In Stalinist Terror, ed. J. Arch Getty and Roberta T. Manning. New York: Cambridge UP. Pp. 65-98.
  • WOROBEC, Christine. “Temptress or Virgin? The Precarious Sexual Position of Women in Postemancipation Ukrainian Peasant Society.” Reprinted in Russian Peasant Women, ed. Beatrice Famsworth and Lynne VIOLA. New York: Oxford UP, 1992. Pp. 41-53.
  • _. “Victims or Actors? Russian Peasant Women and Patriarchy.” In Peasant Economy, Culture, and Politics of European Russia, 18001921, ed. Esther Kingston-Mann and Timothy Mixter. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1991. Pp. 177-206.

Language and Linguistics

  • CARLTON, Terence R. Introduction to the Phonological History of the Slavic Languages. 2nd ed. Columbus, OH: Slavica, 1991. COLARUSSO, John. A Grammar of the Kabardian Language. Calgary: University of Calgary Press, 1992.
  • DINGLEY, John. “A New Grammar of Russian.” [Review Article.] CSP 35.3/4: 385-94.
  • KRAMER, Christina, and Eran Fraenkel, eds. Language Contact—Language Conflict. Balkan Studies 1. New York: Peter Lang.
  • MAGOCSI, Paul Robert. “Scholarly Seminar on the Codification of the Rusyn Language.” In the following: Canadian Review of Studies in Nationalism 20.1/2: 193-95. Europa Ethnica [Vienna] 50.3: 147-49. International Journal of the Sociology of Language [Berlin and New York] 104: 119-23. Õsterreichische Osthefte [Vienna] 35.1: 182-85. Revue d’études slaves [Paris] 65.3: 597-99. Scottish Slavonic Review [Glasgow] 19.2: 145-47. Also, excerpts in CAS Newsletter 33.80: 18.
  • _. “Vedecký seminář о kodifikaci rusínského jazyka.” Slovanský př ehled 79.2: 232-33.
  • MAHOTA, William J. “Romance re- and Russian voz-.” CSP 35.3/4: 291-304.
  • MEL’CUK, Igor. “Agreement, government, congruence.” Lingvisticae investigations 17.2: 307-73.
  • _. “CHANGER et CHANGEMENT en français contemporain (étude sémantico-lexicographique).” Wiener slawistischer Almanach 33 (Festschrift fur Viktor Jul’evic Rozencvejg): 219-72.
  • RAKUSAN, Jaromira. “Code Mixing as a Vehicle of Register: A Case of ‘Old Chicago Czech’.” CSP 35.3/4: 275-90.
  • SCHAARSCHMIDT, Gunter. “Comment.” In International Journal of the Sociology of Language. Vol. 91: Yiddish—The Fifteenth Slavic Language, ed. Joshua A. Fishman. Berlin/New York: Mouton/de Gruyter, 1991. Pp. 187-95.
  • _. “Dialect Variation in Sorbían Reflexes of the Common Slavic jers.” In Principles and Predictions: The Analysis of Natural Language, ed. Mushira Reid and Gregory Iverson. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: Benjamins. Pp. 367-76.
  • _. “Reflexe eines Jer-Umlauts im Sorbischen und Nordwestslawischen.” Lĕ topis 2.40 (Zeitschrift für Sorabistik) 2.40: 19-25.

Literature and Folklore

  • AMBROS, Veronika. Pavel Kohout und die Metamorphosen des Sozialistischen Realismus. Russian and East European Studies in Aesthetics and the Philosophy of Culture 3. New York: Peter Lang.
  • BUYNIAK, Victor O. “In Commemoration of Kraszewski’s Centennial: His Jermola and George Eliot’s Silas Marner.” In Essays for Yvonne Grabowski, ed. John M. P. MCERLEAN. Toronto: Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences in Canada. Pp. 3-14.
  • DOLEŽEL, Lubomír. Narativní zp ů soby v č eskéliteratuř e. Praha: Český spisovatel.
  • _. “Semiotic Poetics of the Prague School.” Encyclopedia of Contemporary Literary Theory: Approaches, Scholars, Terms, ed. and соmр. Irena R. MAKARYK. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Pp. 179-83.
  • MOŻEJKO, Edward. “Constructivism.” “Hrvatsko filološko društvo” [Croatian Philological Society]. “Nitra School.” “Polish structuralism.” In Encyclopedia of Contemporary Literary Theory: Approaches, Scholars, Terms, ed. and сотр. Irena R. MAKARYK. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Pp. 18-20, 94-95, 130-33, and 204-208.
  • NEUDORFL, Marie L. “Czech History, Modem Nation-Building and Tomas G. Masaryk (1850-1937).” Canadian Review of Studies in Nationalism 22.1/2: 13-20.
  • PATERSON, Janet M. “Tartu School.” In Ibid., pp. 208-11.
  • ŠKVORECKY, Josef. Leading a Literary Double-Life in Prague. Jackson Lecture. Toronto: Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, 1991.
  • _. “Reception: An Authorial Experience.” In Literature and Politics in Eastern Europe: Selected Papers from the Fourth World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies, Harrogate, 1990, ed. Celia Hawkesworth. New York: St. Martin’s, 1992.
  • WILSON, Paul, trans. Josef SKVORECKY. The Republic of Whores: A Fragment from the Time of the Cults. New York: Knopf.
  • ADAMANTOVA, Vera. Poetika perevoda M. A. Voloshina. Ottawa: Legas.
  • BERAHA, Laura. “The Last Rogue of History: Picaresque Elements in Sasha Sokolov’s Palisandriia.” CSP 35.3/4: 201-20.
  • DOLEŽEL, Lubomír. “The Fictional World of Dostoevskij’s The Idiot.” Russian, Croatian and Serbian, Czech and Slovak, Polish Literature 33.2/3: 239-48.
  • HEIER, Edmund. Literary Portraiture in Nineteenth Century Russian Prose. Köln: Böhlau Verlag.
  • KIDDER, Richard. “Roman Jakobson.” Encyclopedia of Contemporary Literary Theory: Approaches, Scholars, Terms, ed. and сотр. Irena R. MAKARYK. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Pp. 375-78.
  • KOLESNIKOFF, Nina. “The Generic Structure of Ljudmila Petrusevskaja’s Pesni vostočnyx slavjan.” Slavic and East European Journal 37.2: 22030.
  • ____. “Russian formalism.” “Boris Mikhailovich Eikhenbaum.” “Vladimir Iakovlevich Propp.” “Viktor Borisovich Shklovskii.” “Boris Viktorovich Tomashevskii.” “Iurii Nikolaevich Tynianov.” Encyclopedia of Contemporary Literary Theory: Approaches, Scholars, Terms, ed. and сотр. Irena R. MAKARYK. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Pp. 53-60, 305, 449-50, 471-72, 479-80, and 481-82.
  • LANTZ, Kenneth, trans, and annotator. Fyodor Dostoevsky. A Writer’s Diary. Vol. 1: 1873-1876. Introductory study by Gary Saul Morson. Evanston, IL: Northwestern UP.
  • LEGRAND, Eva. “Iurii Mikhailovich Lotman.” “Jan Mukarovsky.” Encyclopedia of Contemporary Literary Theory: Approaches, Scholars, Terms, ed. and сотр. Irena R. MAKARYK. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Pp. 407-10 and 430-32.
  • ROLL, Serafima. “The Death of Language and the Language of Death in Nina Sadur’s ‘Echaj’.” Russian, Croatian and Serbian, Czech and Slovak, Polish Literature 34.2: 187-206.
  • STEELE, James. “Tzvetan Todorov.” “Boris Andreevich Uspenskii.” “Alexander K. Zholkovskii.” Encyclopedia of Contemporary Literary Theory: Approaches, Scholars, Terms, ed. and сотр. Irena R. MAKARYK. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Pp. 477-79, 482-84, and 501502.
  • TURNER, C. J. G. “Chekhov’s Story without a Title: Chronotope and Geme.” CSP 35.3/4: 329-34.
  • _. A Karenina Companion. Waterloo, ON: Wilfrid Laurier UP. ŽEKULIN, Nicholas. “Changing Perspectives: The Prose of Natal’ia Baranskaia.” CSP 35.3/4: 235-48.
  • _. “Soviet Russian Women’s Literature in the Early 1980s.” In Fruits of Her Plume: Essays on Contemporary Russian Women’s Culture, ed. Helena Goscilo. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe. Pp. 33-58.
  • BAHRY, Romana M [Romana BAHRIJ]. Shliakh sera Val’tera Skotta na Ukrainu: “Taras Bul’ba” M. Hoholia i “Chorna rada” P. Kulisha v svitli istorychnoi romanistyky Val’tera Skotta. Trans. Liudmyla Sharinova. Kyiv: Vsesvit.
  • KRASNOSHTAN, Iukhym. “Shcevchenko i dekabrysty.” Nowi dni 519: 24-26.
  • _. “Shistdesiatnytsia—Mykhailyna Kotsiubyns’ka.” Ibid. 515: 16-17.
  • LUCKYJ, George [IUrii Luts’kyi], Lystuvannia z Ievhenom Sverstiukom [A Correspondence with Ievhen Sverstiuk]. Biblioteka “Smoloskypa” 62. Toronto: Ukr. vyd-vo “Smoloskyp” im. V. Symonenka, 1992.
  • MAKARYK, Irena R. “Ophelia as Poet: Lesia Ukrainka and the Woman as Artist.” Canadian Review of Comparative Literature 20.3/4: 337-54.
  • _, John FIZER, and Danylo STRUK, eds. Poza tradytsii. Edmonton/Kiev: University of Ottawa/CIUS. [An anthology of contemporary Ukrainian poetry compiled by Bohdan Boychuk.]
  • NEBES’O, Bohdan Y. “How Much Prose Do the Cossack Chronicles Contain?: The Fictional Worlds of Samiilo Velychko’s Discourse on the Cossack War....” Slovo i chas (Kiev) 9: 22-30. [In Ukrainian.]
  • SHKANDRIJ, Myroslav. “Literary Discussion.” Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Vol. 3: 140.
  • _. “Ukrains’kyi prozovyi avanhard 20-kh.” Slovo i chas (Kiev) 8: 51-57.
  • _. “Serhii Yefremov.” Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Vol. 5: 764-65.
  • STRUK, Danylo Husar. “Literature.” Ibid. Vol. 3: 143-50.

Politics, Law, and International Relations

  • BLACK, J. L. Canadian-Russian Relations: Present and Future: the Russian Perspective. CRCR Conference/Roundtable Reports 3. Ottawa: Carleton University Press.
  • _. “Constitutional Crises in Two Countries: The Soviet Perception of Federal-Provincial Relations in Canada.” In Nationalism and the Breakup of an Empire: Russia and Its Periphery, ed. Miron REZUN. Westport, CT: Praeger, 1992. Pp. 158-69.
  • BUSZYNSKI, Leszek. “Russia and the Asia-Pacific Region.” Pacific Affairs 65.4: 486-509.
  • HAVEL, Vá clav. Summer Meditations. Trans. Paul WILSON. Toronto: Knopf. [Analysis of political situation of Czechoslovakia.]
  • IGNATIEFF, Michael. Blood & Belonging: Journeys into the New Nationalism. Toronto: Viking.
  • KIRSCHBAUM, Stanislav J. “The Czech Question in Slovakia in the Post-War Years.” Slovakia 35.64/65 (1991-92): 97-108.
  • _, ed. “A Century and a Half of Czech-Slovak Relations: A Slovak Perspective.” (Introduction to Symposium.) Slovakia 35.64/65 (199192): 61-62.
  • KOSTASH, Myma, trans. Solomiia Dmitrievna Pavlychko. Letters from Kiev, Preface and annotations by Bohdan KRAWCHENKO. New York: St. Martin’s, in association with CIUS, 1992.
  • KRAWCHENKO, Bohdan. “Ukraine: the Politics of Independence.” In Nations and Politics in the Soviet Successor States, ed. Ian Bremmer and Ray Taras. New York: Cambridge UP. Pp. 75-98.
  • KRAWCHUK, Peter. Vid Petra I do Suslova. Kyiv: Ros’, 1992.
  • MAGOCSI, Paul Robert. “Carpatho-Rusyns: A New or Revived People?” In Kalendar-Almanac National Slovak Society of the USA for the Year 1993, ed. Joseph Stefka. Pittsburgh, PA: NSS-USA. Pp. 38^45.
  • _. “Carpatho-Rusyns: A Tortuous Quest for Identity.” Cross Currents 12: 147-59.
  • _. “Carpatho-Rusyns: Their Current Status and Future Perspectives.” Slovakia 35.64/65 (1991-92): 36-57.
  • __. “Carpatho-Rusyns: Their Current Status and Future Perspectives.” Carpatho-Rusyn American 16.2: 4-9.
  • _. “The Rusyns of Transcarpathia.” In Minorities in Central and Eastern Europe. Minorities Rights Group International Report 1. London: MRG. Pp. 23-26, 44.
  • MACKENZIE, Lewis. Peacekeeper: The Road to Sarajevo. Vancouver: Douglas & Mclntyre. [UN commander in Bosnia, 1992.]
  • MANDEL, David. Rabotyagi: Perestroïka and After Viewed from Below: Interviews with Workers in the Former Soviet Union. New York: Monthly Review.
  • ______. Perestroika and the Soviet People: Rebirth of the Labour Movement. Montreal: Black Rose, 1991.
  • MARPLES, David R. ‘“After the Putsch’: Prospects for Independent Ukraine.” Nationalities Papers 2 1.2: 35-46.
  • _. “Belarus: The Illusion of Stability.” Post-Soviet Affairs 9.3: 453-77.
  • _. “Language, Culture, and the Search for a Ukrainian Hero: An Interview with Yurii Pokal’chuk.” In Ukraine: from Chernobyl to Sovereignty: a Collection of Interviews, ed. Roman Solchanyk. Edmonton: CIUS, 1992. Pp. 31-39.
  • _. “Vechirnii Kyiv, the Voice of Perestroika in Ukraine: An Interview with Vitalii Karpenko.” In Ibid., pp. 1-6.
  • _and Chrystina Freeland. “Inside Ukrainian Politics: An Interview with Dmytro Pavlychko.” In Ibid., pp. 117-26.
  • MIRKOVIC, Damir. “Victims and Peipetrators in the Yugoslav Genocide, 1941-1945: Some Preliminary Observations.” Holocaust and Genocide Studies 7.3: 317-32.
  • OSBORNE, Brian. “New Players—Same Game.” [Review Article] Queen’s Quarterly 100.2 (1993): 415-419.
  • POKORNY, Dušan. Efficiency and Justice in the Industrial World. Vol. 1: The Failure of the Soviet Experiment. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 1993.
  • REZUN, Miron. Europe and War in the Balkans: Towards a New Yugoslav Identity. New York: Paragon House.
  • _, ed. Nationalism and the Breakup of an Empire: Russia and Its Periphery. WestportCT: Praeger, 1992.
  • SHUMUK, Danylo. Iz Gulagu u vil’nyi svit: rosdumy pro zustrichi z ukrains’koiu diiasporoiu i uriadovymy chynnykamy ta dopovnennia do knyzhky “Perezhyte iperedumane”. Toronto: Novy Shliakh, 1991.
  • SOLOMON, Peter H., Jr. “Soviet Politicians and Criminal Prosecutions: The Logic of Party Intervention.” In Cracks in the Monolith: Party Power in the Brezhnev Era, ed. James R. Millar. Contemporary Soviet/Post-Soviet Politics Series. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 1992. Pp. 3-32.
  • SOLOMON, Susan Gross. “Beyond Sovietology: Thoughts on Studying Russian Politics After Perestroika.” Introduction in Beyond Sovietology: Essays in Politics and History, ed. Susan G. SOLOMON. Contemporary Soviet/Post-Soviet Politics Series. Armonk, NY: M.E.Sharpe. Pp. 1-7.
  • STODDARD, Ed. “Post-Soviet Lithuania: ‘Curing’ Communism, Car Bombs and Cold Showers.” New Maritimes 9.3: 33-35.
  • ZASLAVSKY, Victor. “The Evolution of Separatism in Soviet Society under Gorbachev.” In From Union to Commonwealth: Nationalism and Separatism in the Soviet Republics, ed. Gail Lapidus and Victor ZASLAVSKY, with Philip Goldman. Cambridge Soviet Paperbacks 6. New York: Cambridge UP, 1992. Pp. 71-87.
  • _. “Natsionalizm i perekhid do demokratii v postkomunistychnykh suspil’stvakh.” Trans. Iurii Petrus. Suchasnist 3: 111-27. [Original English version in Daedalus 121.2 (1992): 97-121.
  • _. “Success and Collapse: Traditional Soviet Nationality Policy.” In Nations and Politics in the Soviet Successor States, ed. Ian Bremmer and Ray Taras. New York: Cambridge UP, 1992. Pp. 29-42.
  • ZUROWSKI, Michael. “The British Foreign Office and Poland’s Eastern Minorities, 1918-1941.” Ukrainian Quarterly 46.4 (1990): 399-420. [Continued from Ibid. 46.3.]
  • _. “British Policy Towards the Polish Second Corps.” East European Quarterly 27.3: 271-300.

Religion and Philosophy

  • BOCIURKIW, Bohdan R. “The Issues of Ukrainianization and Autocephaly of the Orthodox Church in Ukrainian-Russian Relations, 1917-1921.” In Ukraine and Russia in Their Historical Encounter, ed. Peter J. POTICHNYJ, et al. Papers from the First Conference on Ukrainian-Russian Relations, 8-9 October 1981, Hamilton, ON. Edmonton: CIUS. Pp. 245-73.
  • GERVERS, Michael, and Wayne SCHLEPP, eds. Nomadic Diplomacy, Destruction and Religion from the Pacific to the Adriatic. Toronto Studies in Central and Inner Asia 1. Toronto: Joint Centre for Asia Pacific Studies.
  • MAGOCSI, Paul Robert [Philip Michaels]. “Josyf Sembratovyč (1821-1900)” Carpatho-Rusyn American 16.2: 2.
  • _. Religion and Identity in the Carpathians: East Christians in Poland and Czechoslovakia.” In Christianity and the Eastern Slavs. Vol. 1: Slavic Cultures in the Middle Ages, ed. Boris Gasparov and Olga Raevsky-Hughes. California Slavic Studies 16. Pp. 116-38.
  • MCERLEAN, John M. P. “Catholics in Russia.” Modern Encyclopedia of Religions in Russia and the Soviet Union (MERRSU). Vol. 5: 90-98.
  • ORWIN, Donna Tussing. Tolstoy’s Art and Thought, 1847-1880. Princeton: Princeton UP.
  • POSPIELOVSKY, Dimitry V. “Obnovlenchestvo: pereosmyslenie techeniia v svete arkhivnykh dokumentov.” Vestnik Russkogo Khristianskogo dvizheniia (Paris-Moscow) 168: 197-227.
  • _. “Russkaia Pravoslavnaia Tserkov’: ispytaniia nachala 20go veka.” Voprosy istorii 1: 42-54.
  • _. “The Russian Orthodox Church in the Post-Communist CIS.” Modern Greek Studies Yearbook 9: 227-66.
  • ROLLAND, Peter. “‘Nieskoro’ prawi ‘monsztuk do tych trab otrzymacie’: On Lazar Baranovyc’s Truby sloves propovidnyx and their Non-publication in Moscow.” Journal of Ukrainian Studies 17.1/2 (1992): 205-16.
  • SAWATSKY, Walter. “Protestantism in the USSR.” In Religious Policy in the Soviet Union, ed. Sabrina Petra Ramet. New York: Cambridge UP. Pp. 319-49.
  • TATARYN, Myroslaw. “The Re-emergence of the Ukrainian (Greek) Catholic Church in the USSR.” In Ibid., pp. 292-318.
  • TOEWS, John B. “The Early Mennonite Brethren and Conversion.” Journal of Mennonite Studies 11: 76-97.
  • TOEWS, Paul, ed. Mennonites and Baptists: A Continuing Conversation. Winnipeg: Kindred. [Includes Poland and Russia.]
  • WYBREW, Hugh. “Anglican-Orthodox Dialogue: Its Past, Its Present and Its Future.” Sobornost: Eastern Churches Review 15.1: 7-19.

Slavs and East Europeans in the West

  • GREGOROVICH, Andrew, сотр.; Gabriele SCARDELLATO, ed. A Bibliography of Canada’s Peoples. Supplement I, 1872-1979. Toronto: Multicultural History Society of Ontario; dist. by University of Toronto Press.
  • KLIPPENSTEIN, Lawrence. “The Slavic Collection of the Mennonite Heritage Centre Archives.” Heritage Review 23.2: 4-7.
  • VOITSENKO, Olha. [Olha Woycenko] Litopys ukrainskoho zhyttia v Kanadi. T. 8: U zmahanni za novu Kanadu: pochatky ofitsiinoi dvomovnosty i bahatokulturnosty, 1970-1979. Edmonton: CIUS, 1992.
  • ADELMAN, Howard. “An Immigration Dream: Hungarian Refugees Come to Canada—An Analysis.” In Breaking Ground: the 1956 Hungarian Refugee Movement to Canada, ed. Robert H. KEYSERLINGK. Toronto: York Lanes. Pp. 25-44.
  • BISZTRAY, George. “Image Or Self-image? Reports on Hungarian-Canadians in Hungarian Publications of the 1980s.” East European Quarterly 27.1: 65-77.
  • BRYM, Robert J., William SHAFFIR, and Morton WEINFELD, eds. The Jews in Canada. Don Mills, ON: Oxford UP.
  • BUYNIAK, Victor О. “Pochatky ukrainistyky yak predmetu navchannya v Kanadi” [The Beginnings of Ukrainian Studies in Canadian Educational Institutions]. In Movoznavstvo: Druhyi mizhnarodnyi kongres ukrainistiv. L’viv: Akademia Nauk Ukrainy. Pp. 131-36.
  • CIPKO, Serge. “Ukrainian Buenos Aires: Aspects of Contemporary Ukrainian Life in the Land of the River Plate.” Forum: A Ukrainian Review 88: 21-24.
  • CHERNENKOFF, Mike E., et al. Tiuremnyi dnevnik: sobytie i perezhivanie v gornoi tiur’me, Agassiz, B. K. 1962-1969. Crescent Valley, B. C: Steve Lapshinoff.
  • CUNLIFFE, Harry. “The Liberalization of Immigration Policy From 1945 to 1956: An Insider’s View.” In Breaking Ground: the 1956 Hungarian Refugee Movement to Canada, ed. Robert H. KEYSERLINGK. Toronto: York Lanes. Pp. 13-23.
  • DIRKS, Gerald E. “Canada and Immigration: International and Domestic Considerations in the Decade Preceding the 1956 Hungarian Exodus. In Ibid., pp. 3-11.
  • DREISZIGER, N. F. “The Refugee Experience in Canada and the Evolution of the Hungarian-Canadian Community.” In Ibid, pp. 65-85.
  • EWANCHUK, Michael. Hawaiian Ordeal: Ukrainian Contract Workers 18971910. Winnipeg: [the author], 1986.
  • _[Mykhailo Ivanchuk]. Pioners’ki poselennia: Ukraintsi v Kanadi. Winnipeg: [the author].
  • FRIESEN, John W. “Pacifism and Anastasia’s Doukhobor Village.” Alberta History 41.1: 14-19.
  • GOERZ, Heinrich. The Molotschna Settlement. Trans. Al REIMER and John B. TOEWS. Echo Historical Series 7. Winnipeg: CMBC/Manitoba Mennonite Historical Society.
  • GRIFFIN, Kevin. Vancouver’s Many Faces: Passport to the Cultures of a City. North Vancouver: Whitecap.
  • HAWKINS, Freda. “Canada’s Hungarian Movement: A Personal Recollection.” In Breaking Ground: the 1956 Hungarian Refugee Movement to Canada, ed. Robert H. KEYSERLINGK. Toronto: York Lanes. Pp. 109-13.
  • HRYNIUK, Stella. “The Dauphin [Ukrainian Catholic] Church of the Resurrection.” Forum: A Ukrainian Review 87 (1992): 25-27.
  • _, ed. Twenty Years of Multiculturalism: Successes And Failures. Winnipeg: St. John’s College Press, 1992.
  • _ and Lubomyr LUCIUK, eds. Multiculturalism and Ukrainian Canadians: Identity, Homeland Ties, and the Community’s Future. Polyphony 13. Toronto: Multicultural History Society of Ontario. [Includes discussions between and comments by various Canadian scholars.]
  • IGNATIEFF, Michael. “Family Album.” Queen’s Quarterly 100.1: 121-38.
  • ISAJIW, Wsevolod, Aysan SEVER and Leo DRIEDGER. “Ethnic Identity and Social Mobility: A Test of the ‘Drawback Model’.” Canadian Journal of Sociology 18.2: 179-98.
  • JANZEN, William. Limits on Liberty: The Experience of Mennonite, Hutterite, and Doukhobor Communities in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1990.
  • KAGE, Dr. Joseph. “The Settlement of Hungarian Refugees in Canada.” In Breaking Ground: the 1956 Hungarian Refugee Movement to Canada, ed. Robert H. KEYSERLINGK. Toronto: York Lanes. Pp. 99-107.
  • KEYSERLINGK, Robert H., ed. Breaking Ground: the 1956 Hungarian Refugee Movement to Canada. Toronto: York Lanes. [Includes an Introduction by the editor (pp. vii-x); also, in the Appendix, a letter to the Secretary of the Canadian Immigration Historical Society (CIHS), from Bill McFaul, Eastern District Superintendent, Montreal, Department of Citizenship and Immigration, 1956.]
  • KLIPPENSTEIN, Lawrence. “Canadian Mennonites in World War II.” Mennonite Life 48.3: 4-6.
  • KNYSH, George D. “Michael Sherbinin and His Philanthropic Work in Winnipeg, 1904-1911.” Zhinochyi svit = Women’s World 43.11/12 (1992): 15-18; 44.1 (1993): 8-12; 44.2 (1993): 16-20.
  • KORDAN, Bohdan S. “Righting Historical Wrongs: Canada’s Ukrainian Crime.” Canadian Speeches, Issues of the Day 7.5: 2-4, 6.
  • KOSTASH, Myrna. “Eurocentricity: Notes on Metaphors of Place.” In Twenty Years of Multiculturalism: Successes And Failures, ed. Stella HRYNIUK. Winnipeg: St. John’s College Press, 1992. Pp. 39-43.
  • LOEWEN, Royden K. Family, Church and Market: A Mennonite Community in the Old and the New Worlds, 1850-1930. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • LUHOVY, Yurij. “They did not believe such a thing could happen in Canada.” Canadian Speeches 7.5: 5. [Exceipt from Fran PONOMARENKO’s interview, Matrix Magazine 40: 5-9.]
  • MAGOCSI, Paul Robert. “Commentary.” In The Persistance of Regional Cultures: Rusyns and Ukrainians in Their Carpathian Homeland and Abroad, ed. Paul Robert MAGOCSI. Classics of Carpatho-Rusyn Scholarship 5. New York: Columbia UP/East European Quarterly. Pp. 191-202.
  • ____. “Made or Re-made in America?: Nationality and Identity Formation Among Carpatho-Rusyn Immigrants and Their Descendants.” In Ibid.
  • MANION, John L. “The Hungarian Refugee Movement: Implementing the Policy.” In Breaking Ground: the 1956 Hungarian Refugee Movement to Canada, ed. Robert H. KEYSERLINGK. Toronto: York Lanes. Pp. 53-56.
  • MARKUS, Roberta L., and Donald V. SCHWARTZ. “Soviet Jewish Émigrés in Toronto: Ethnic Self-Identity and Issues of Integration.” In The Jews in Canada, ed. Robert J. BRYM, William SHAFFIR, and Morton WEINFELD. Don Mills, ON: Oxford UP. Pp. 402-20.
  • MATEJKO, Alexander J. and Steven D. WILLIAMS. “Building Trust in Interethnic Encounters.” Canadian Ethnic Studies 25.2: 1-14.
  • MCCARTHY, Earl E. “The Hungarian Refugee Movement: Transportation and Settlement in Canada.” In Breaking Ground: the 1956 Hungarian Refugee Movement to Canada, ed. Robert H. KEYSERLINGK. Toronto: York Lanes. Pp. 57-62.
  • PICKERSGILL, The Honourable J. W. “The Minister and the Hungarian Refugees.” In Ibid., pp. 47-51.
  • PONOMARENKO, Fran. “Price of Freedom: Fran Ponomarenko Interviews Yurij Luhovy.” Matrix Magazine 40: 5-9.
  • PROCHAZKA, Marta. “An Absurd Way of Life: ‘A Very Unusual Feeling’.” Canadian Ethnic Studies 25.2: 119-35.
  • ROINILA, Mika. “Finns of Interior B. C, Canada—Okanagan Valley Case Study.” Siirolatsuus = Migration 1: 12-22.
  • SCHEFFEL, David. In the Shadow of the Antichrist: The Old Believers of Alberta. Peterborough, ON: Broadview, 1991.
  • SERBYN, Roman. Holod 1921-1923: ukrainska presa v Kanadi. Toronto: Ukrainian Canadian Research and Documentation Centre; Kyiv: Instytut ukrainskoi arkheohrafii Akademii nauk Ukrainy.
  • SEV’ER, Aysan, Wsevolod W. ISAJIW, and Leo DRIEDGER. “Anomie as Powerlessness, Sorting Ethnic Group Prestige, Class and Gender.” Canadian Ethnic Studies 25.2: 84-99.
  • SHUMUK, Danylo. Iz Gulagu u vil’nyi svit: rosdumy pro zustrichi zukrains’koiu diiasporoiu i uriadovymy chynnykamy ta dopovnennia do knyzhky “Perezhyte iperedumane”. Toronto: Novy Shliakh, 1991.
  • SLAVUTYCH, Yar. “The Famine of 1932-1933 in the Ukrainian Literature Abroad.” Ukrainian Quarterly 49.2: 165-83.
  • STOLARIK, M. Mark. “The Slovak Search for Identity in the United States 1880-1918.” Canadian Review of Studies in Nationalism 22.1/2: 45-55.
  • STUEMER, Diane King. Hawrelak: The Story. Calgary: Script: The Writer’s Group, 1992.
  • SWYRIPA, Frances. “Remembering the Ukrainian Female Pioneer.: ACUA Vitae 2.3 (1992): 3-4.
  • _. Wedded to the Cause: Ukrainian-Canadian Women and Ethnic Identity, 1891-1991. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1992.
  • _, guest ed. Ukrainians in Canada. Journal of Ukrainian Studies [Special Edition] 16.1/2(1991).
  • TARNOCAI, Charles. “The University of Sopron in Canada.” In Breaking Ground: the 1956 Hungarian Refugee Movement to Canada, ed. Robert H. KEYSERLINGK. Toronto: York Lanes. Pp. 87-97.
  • TOEWS, John B. A Pilgrimage of Faith: the Mennonite Brethren in Russia and North America, 1860-1990. Winnipeg: Kindred. TOEWS, Paul, ed. Mennonites and Baptists: A Continuing Conversation. Winnipeg: Kindred.
  • TROPER, Harold, and Morton WEINFELD. “Jewish-Ukrainian Relations in Canada since World War II and the Emergence of the Nazi War Criminal Issue.” In The Jews in Canada, ed. Robert J. BRYM, William SHAFFIR, and Morton WEINFELD. Don Mills, ON: Oxford UP. Pp. 193-217.
  • ZURAKOWSKA, Anna, ed. The Proud Inheritance: Ontario’s Kaszuby. Ottawa: Polish Heritage Institute-Kaszuby, 1991.
  • DREISZIGER, Kalman. “Hungarian Community Folkdance Groups in Canada.” Hungarian Studies Review 20.1/2: 71-82.
  • HORNJATKEVYCH, Andrij. “Kobzars’ke mystetstvo Hryhoriia Kytastoho.” Narodna tvorchist ta etnohrafiia 5/6: 9-12.
  • _. “Vystavky kartyn dam Jana Hornjatkevycha v Ukrajini.” ACUA Vitae 2.3 (1992): 7-8.
  • _. “Z banduroju po Ukrajini, abo ‘Have Banduia Will Travel’.” Ibid. 2.3 (1992): 9-12.
  • KLYMASZ, Robert. “Mistse ukrains’koho kanads’koho fol’kloru v fol’klorystytsi Ukrainy.” Narodna tvorchist ta etnohrafiia 2: 43-45.
  • KOCJANCIC, Cvetka. Unhappy Rebel: The Life and Art of Andy Stritof. Ethnocultural Voices Series. Downsview, ON: Multicultural History Society of Ontario.
  • LESOWAY, Marie. “Jacob Matwiiw: Music, Music, Music! This Has Been the Lifelong Interest of Mundane Choirmaster.” ACUA Vitae 2.3 (1992): 5-6.
  • SERBYN, Roman, and Iaroslav KHARCHUN. “Shovkova” rusyfikatsiia ukrains’koi diiaspory. 2nd ed. Montreal: [the authors].
  • SLAVUTYCH, Yar. “Kanads’kyi roman Ulasa Samchuka.” Nowi dni 514: 33-34.
  • _. Ukrains’ka literatura v Kanadi: vybrani doslidzhennia, statti i retsenzii. Edmonton: Slavuta, 1992.
  • Zhnyva mrii = Harvest of Dreams = Une récolte de rêves: A Centennial Celebration of Ukrainian Life in Canada. Winnipeg: Ukrainian Cultural and Educational Centre, 1992.
  • ZUK, Radoslav. “Proekt rozbudovy ukrains’koi diaspomoi kul’tury.” Narodna tvorchist ta etnohrafiia 2: 36-39.

Doctoral Dissertations

  • AVRICH-SKAPINKER, Mindy Beth. “Canadian Jewish Involvement with Soviet Jewry, 1970-1990: The Toronto Case Study (Ontario).” (Ph.D., Toronto)
  • BEAUDOIN, Luc Jean. “Evgenij Baratynskij’s Narrative Poems and ‘Evgenij Onegin’: The Transformation of the Romantic Poema.” (Ph.D., Toronto)
  • CLIBBON, Jennifer. “The Soviet Press and Grassroots Organization: The Rabkor Movement, NEP to the First Five-Year Plan.” (Ph.D., Toronto).
  • DOERR, Paul William. “Caution in the Card Room: The British Foreign Office Northern Department and the USSR, 1934-1940. (Ph.D., Waterloo)
  • FALKOWSKA, Janina. “Dialogism in the Political Films of Andrzej Wajda: ‘Man of Marble’, ‘Man of Iron’ and ‘Danton’.” (Ph.D., McGill)
  • HACKING, Jane. “A Comparative Typology of Conditionals in Russian and Macedonian.” (Ph.D., Toronto)
  • HELLEBUST, Rolf. “The Pushkinian Tradition as Narrative and Intertext.” (Ph.D., Toronto)
  • KELEBAY, Yarema Gregory. “The Ideological and Intellectual Baggage of Three Fragments of Ukrainian Immigrants: A Contribution to the History of Ukrainians in Quebec (1910-1960).” (Ph.D., Concordia)
  • KRAWCHENKO, Rev. Oleh. “Skovoroda in the Bible.” (Ph.D., Ukrainian Free University, Munich)
  • LOMBARDI, Robert. “Embedded Containment: Creation of the Cocom Regime, 1947-1954.” (Ph.D., Toronto)
  • MOSTAFA, Golam. “National Interest and Foreign Policy: A Case Study of Bangladesh-Soviet Relations, 1980-1990.” (Ph.D., Carleton)
  • MOUTAIN, Rosemary. “An Investigation of Periodicity in Music, with Reference to Three Twentieth-Century Compositions: Bartok’s ‘Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta’, Lutoslawski’s ‘Concerto for Orchestra’, Ligeti’s ‘Chamber Concerto’.” (Ph.D., Victoria)
  • NOVKOVIC, Sonja. “Theory of the Labor-Managed Firm: The Yugoslavian Case.” (Ph.D., McGill)
  • REDEKOP, Gloria L. Neufeld. “Mennonite Women’s Societies in Canada: A Historical Case Study.” (Ph.D., Ottawa)
  • SENS, Allen G. “Nato’s Small Powers and Alliance Change After the Cold War.” (Ph.D., Queen’s)
  • SPENCER, Daryl Paul. “Aspects of the Syntax of Relative Clauses in Colloquial and Standard Russian.” (Ph.D., Toronto)
  • TUMANOV, Vladimir A. “Unnamed Direct Interior Monologue in European Fiction: A Study of Four Authors.” (Ph.D., Alberta)

Masters Theses

  • ABIEW, Francis Kofi. “Revisiting the Right of Humanitarian Intervention in International Law.” (M.A., Alberta)
  • BAKER, Mark Robert. “A Tale of Two Historians: The Involvement of R. W. Seton-Watson and Lewis Namier in the Creation of New Nation-States in Eastern Europe at the End of the First World War.” (M.A., Alberta)
  • BENIUK, Andrew George. “The Referendum: On the Road to Ukraine’s Independence.” (M.A., Alberta)
  • BONNEVILLE, Gerard Leo. “I. V. Kireevsky: The Flawed Critic. The Road to Narodnost’, or, Getting Around the West.” (M.A., Carleton)
  • CORBEIL, Carole. “L’initiation de Défense Stratégique: Les Traites et les Négociations entre Moscou et Washington.” [French text] (M.A., Laval)
  • COULOMBE, Paul-André. “Les Conseillers Soviétiques et Les Forces Nationalistes Révolutionnaires Chinoises, 1923-1927: Motivations, Méthodes, Réactions, Perceptions, Relations.” (M.A., Royal Military College of Canada)
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