Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF FIGURES AND TABLES
- PREFACE
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Mechanisms and Process
- 3 Lithuania, 1940–1941
- 4 Rebellion in an Urban Community: The Role of Leadership and Centralization
- 5 The German Occupation of Lithuania
- 6 Postwar Lithuania
- 7 More Cases, More Comparisons
- 8 Resistance in the Perestroika Period
- 9 Fanatics and First Actors
- 10 Conclusions
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX
PREFACE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF FIGURES AND TABLES
- PREFACE
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Mechanisms and Process
- 3 Lithuania, 1940–1941
- 4 Rebellion in an Urban Community: The Role of Leadership and Centralization
- 5 The German Occupation of Lithuania
- 6 Postwar Lithuania
- 7 More Cases, More Comparisons
- 8 Resistance in the Perestroika Period
- 9 Fanatics and First Actors
- 10 Conclusions
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX
Summary
This book endeavors to explain how ordinary men and women, in the face of enormous risks, resist and sometimes violently rebel against powerful regimes. Theoretically, the work seeks to identify sequences of mechanisms that combine to produce these phenomena. Empirically, the book devotes the bulk of its pages to four episodes of Lithuanian anti-Soviet resistance (1940–1941, 1944–1950, 1987–1988, and January 1991). The Lithuanian case serves as a base line for comparisons with several other cases of anti-Soviet, anti-Communist, and anti-Nazi resistance.
In an important sense, this book began in the mid-1980s, before I started graduate school. At that time, I was selling housewares to Yugoslavian immigrants in Chicago. In the course of this work, conversation would often turn to the violent events that occurred in Yugoslavia during the Second World War. These conversations led to two insights crucial to this book. First, the memories of survivors of this period were extremely vivid and could be usefully tapped to recreate the social life of the wartime years. Second, it seemed clear that participants in the anti-German resistance and the underlying Chetnik-Partisan conflict did not usually become involved because of ideological or political reasons; rather, they were pulled in through their social networks. There was a connection between participation in resistance and local social norms – a theme pursued throughout this book.
As a graduate student in the Political Science Department at the University of Chicago, I wished to capitalize on my previous experience to write about 1940s Yugoslavia, especially Bosnia.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Resistance and RebellionLessons from Eastern Europe, pp. xiii - xviPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001