Andrii Portnov’s “Poland and Ukraine” is the seventh Essay published in our Essay series. Read or download it here.
On 15 October 2020, 18:00, the scholars of Eastern Europe Susanne K. Frank (Humboldt University Berlin), Elżbieta Kwiecińska (European University Institute Florence), Andrii Portnov (Prisma Ukraïna – Research Network Eastern Europe; European University Viadrina) and Tatiana Zhurzhenko (University of Vienna) will get together to discuss about shared histories and asymmetric memories in Poland and Ukraine. The virtual roundtable discussion, moderated by Rory Finnin (Dept. of Slavonic Studies, Cambridge University), will present Andrii Portnov’s study “Poland and Ukraine – Entangled Histories, Asymmetric Memories” to a wider public.
This Essay addresses the routes and disruptions of some basic historical stereotypes in Polish-Ukrainian relations. It argues that in modern times the Polish and Ukrainian national projects represented two competing political legitimacies: one based on historical borders and civilization, and the other based on the ethnographic composition of the population. This essay will analyze the legacy of the early modern Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Cossack mythology, the Ukrainian-Polish war over Lviv/Lwów in 1918, the ethnic cleansing of Volhynian Poles in 1943, the activities of Jerzy Giedroyc’s “Kultura” and post-Soviet memory wars and reconciliation projects.