Contents
Academic literature on the topic 'Déportés lituaniens'
Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles
Consult the lists of relevant articles, books, theses, conference reports, and other scholarly sources on the topic 'Déportés lituaniens.'
Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.
You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.
Journal articles on the topic "Déportés lituaniens"
Blum, Alain. "Décision politique et articulation bureaucratique : les déportés lituaniens de l’opération « Printemps » (1948)." Revue d’histoire moderne et contemporaine 62-4, no. 4 (2015): 64. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rhmc.624.0064.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Déportés lituaniens"
Burksaityte, Goda. "La transmission inter et trans-gérénationnelle et les mécanismes de l'élaboration de l'expérience de déportation et d'exil en Sibérie : le cas des anciens déportés lituaniens et de leurs descendants." Thesis, Sorbonne Paris Cité, 2018. https://wo.app.u-paris.fr/cgi-bin/WebObjects/TheseWeb.woa/wa/show?t=2047&f=15243.
Full textThe deportations to Siberia of the populations consist of one of the forms of political repression carried out in the USSR under the Stalinist regime. In Lithuania, part of the former Soviet bloc, around 130,000 people were deported (1940-1941, 1945-1953). For families who survive the journey and the first particularly difficult years, a new life is woven progressively working towards a paradoxical rooting in this land of forced exile. Yet, below the potential pathogenic effects on the affected individual and group, collective violence also generates new forms of relationships and psychic life. During the exile, couples are created, and a succession comes into the world carrying a double and potentially conflictual belonging conveyed in this status of children of deportees. The de-Stalinization policy (from 1953) will gradually grant these families the right of return. But they will find a changed country, struggling with the totalitarian regime submitting their history to denial and defamation. Their persecutions and discriminations will cease only with the collapse of the USSR and the event of independence in 1990 which will mark the opening of collective commemorative spaces. Different individual and family destinies unfold as to the possibilities of getting out of a traumatic repetition, of integrating, even of creating, from this history of violence conveyed in family transmissions. For some, specific individual and collective spaces and rituals emerge, and are sometimes revisited and reinvented from one generation to the next; such as the work of (co) -writing, the (return) journey in the old places of exile, the different voices of testimony. They work within a quest for meaning, a creation of symbols, and the inscription in the memory (collective and intimate) of family history, and at the same time of the History, remained long in need of words and place
Books on the topic "Déportés lituaniens"
Shihao, Lin, ed. Hui ying di dai. Taibei Shi: Cheng bang wen hua shi ye gu fen you xian gong si, 2012.
Find full text