New Research Project: Sweden and Ukraine in the History of Museum Collections and Exhibition Narratives

Authors

  • Fedir Androschuk

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37718/CSA.2023.17

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References

UNESCO 2023. Damaged Cultural Sites in Ukraine Verified by UNESCO. https://www. unesco.org/en/articles/damaged-cultural-sites-ukraine-verified-unesco [Accessed 1 April 2023].

Human Rights Watch 2022. Ukraine: Russians Pillage Kherson Cultural Institutions: Art and Artifacts Stolen. 20 December 2022. https://www.hrw.org/news/2022/12/20/ ukraine-russians-pillage-kherson-cultural-institutions [Accessed 21 March 2023].

The Ukrainian Research Institute HURI 2021. Contextualizing Putin’s ‘On the Historical Unity of Russians and Ukrainians’. https://huri.harvard.edu/news/putin-historicalunity [Accessed 3 April 2023].

Plets, G. & van der Pol, L. 2022. World Heritage and Cultural Statecraft in Putin’s Russia: Patriotic Agendas, Flexible Power Relations, and Geopolitical Ambitions. Change Over Time. Vol. 11(2) pp. 200–224, doi:10.1353/cot.2022.0007.

Pyatnitsky, Y. 2012. Old Russian Art on the Shores of Seine: Some Notes on the ‘Holy Russia: Russian Art from the beginning to the times of Peter the Great’ Exhibition in the Louvre in 2010 [Древнерусское искусство на берегах Сены. Заметки о выставке]. Tyragetia. Istorie. Muzeologie. Serie Noua. Vol. VI [XXI] (2) pp. 365–386.

Santora, M. 2022. Why Russia Stole Potemkin’s Bones. The New York Times. 27 October 2022. https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/27/world/europe/ukraine-russia-potemkinbones.html [Accessed 3 April 2023].

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Published

2024-02-24

How to Cite

Androschuk, F. (2024) “New Research Project: Sweden and Ukraine in the History of Museum Collections and Exhibition Narratives”, Current Swedish Archaeology, 31, pp. 207–209. doi: 10.37718/CSA.2023.17.

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