This is a major new study of the successor states that emerged in the wake of the collapse of the great Russian, Habsburg, Iranian, Ottoman and Qing Empires and of the expansionist powers who renewed their struggle over the Eurasian borderlands through to the end of the Second World War. Surveying the great power rivalry between the Soviet Union, Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan for control over the Western and Far Eastern boundaries of Eurasia, Alfred J. Rieber provides a new framework for understanding the evolution of Soviet policy from the Revolution through to the beginning of the Cold War. Paying particular attention to the Soviet Union, the book charts how these powers adopted similar methods to the old ruling elites to expand and consolidate their conquests, ranging from colonisation and deportation to forced assimilation, but applied them with a force that far surpassed the practices of their imperial predecessors.
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Product Details
Weight: 620g
Dimensions: 152 x 228mm
Publication Date: 25 Aug 2015
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781107426443
About Alfred J. Rieber
Alfred J. Rieber spent thirty years as Professor of History and ten years as Chair at the University of Pennsylvania before moving to Budapest in 1995 to chair and reorganise the History Department at the Central European University. Since then he has taught hundreds of students from the Eurasian borderlands. His first visit to the Soviet Union came in January 1956 followed by his participation in the first year of the cultural exchange at Moscow State University (195859). Over the past fifty years he has continued his scholarly visits and travels throughout Eurasia going as far east as the Buryat Mongol Republic. His publications include works on Soviet foreign policy Russian social history and the comparative history of frontiers. His American and European doctoral students have published widely in the history of the Eurasian borderlands. Professor Rieber's work on frontiers has been translated into Russian Polish and Ukrainian and he has won two teaching awards in the USA and two in Hungary as well as a Prize from the American Philosophical Society. His scholarship has been supported by fellowships from the Ford Foundation the Guggenheim Foundation the National Council for Soviet and East European Studies the National Endowment for the Humanities St Antony's College Oxford and the Inter-University Committee on Travel Grants.