LEADER 03473cam a2200421Ki 4500001 275649 005 20240621233008.0 008 200212s2016 wiua rm 000 0 eng d 024 8 UMI 10252134 035 (OCoLC)on1140386737 035 275649 049 LHMA 040 GZM |beng |erda |epn |cGZM |dLHM 100 1 Holzman, MayaLisa, |eauthor. 245 14 The front within : |bthe Soviet partisan movement, the Komsomol, and the ideological war on the Eastern Front, 1941-1944 / |cby MayaLisa S. Holzman. 264 0 |c2016. 300 xii, 368 leaves : |billustrations (some color) ; |c29 cm 336 text |btxt |2rdacontent 337 unmediated |bn |2rdamedia 338 volume |bnc |2rdacarrier 500 Advisor: Francine R. Hirsch. 520 The multi-ethnic border zone stretching from central Poland to western Russia-the so-called Bloodlands-was the primary site of the Holocaust and the ruthless total war between the Wehrmacht and the Red Army, where German and Soviet imperial plans confronted one another. This dissertation explores the social and political dynamics of Soviet guerrilla resistance against German occupation in this region during the Second World War by examining the role played by the Komsomol (All-Union Leninist Young Communist League) in the partisan movement's defense of the Soviet Union. This dissertation uses the Komsomol as a lens for studying how both Communist Party leaders and partisans interpreted and modified Stalinist discourses regarding nationality, sexual politics, and youth during the exigencies of war in occupied territory. In particular, it sheds light on the important and hitherto neglected social, political, and gendered aspects of the partisan movement and the Komsomol's role in countering German efforts to recruit Soviet youth for labor, police forces, and national liberation armies. This dissertation bridges studies of the partisan movement and the German army by using Soviet and captured German archival materials to demonstrate the centrality of ideology and the psychological realm to Soviet and German policies. I illuminate the interplay between the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany, as each side embraced the use of both propaganda and terror to mobilize young men and women to their side and win the war. My dissertation integrates the Holocaust and German occupation policy into the Soviet Union's Great Patriotic War. I argue that the history of the Second World War in the borderlands cannot be separated from the legacy of German occupation, as Soviet post-liberation purges were driven by more than Bolshevik ideology-they must be viewed as a reaction to German projects of social engineering and extermination. 502 Ph.D. |cUniversity of Wisconsin--Madison |d2016. 530 Electronic version |bavailable internally at ushmm. 591 Record updated by Marcive processing 21 June 2024 653 European history. 653 Russian history. 653 East European studies. 653 German Occupation of the Borderlands. 653 Holocaust. 653 Komsomol. 653 Soviet Partisan Movement. 653 Soviet Union. 653 World War II. 655 7 Academic theses. |2lcgft 776 08 |iOnline version:Holzman, MayaLisa. |tFront within. |w(OCoLC)1132214587 956 41 |3Electronic version available. |zHosted by USHMM |uhttp://dc.ushmm.org/library/bib275649/10252134.pdf 852 |bebook