Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Anti-Slavic sentiment

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromSlavophobia)
Hostility, prejudice, or discrimination against Slavic peoples

Part ofa series on
Discrimination
Manifestations

Anti-Slavic sentiment, also calledSlavophobia, refers to prejudice, collective hatred, and discrimination directed at the variousSlavic peoples. Accompanyingracism andxenophobia, the most common manifestation of anti-Slavic sentiment throughout history has been the assertion that some Slavs areinferior to other peoples. This sentiment peaked duringWorld War II, whenNazi Germany classified most of the Slavs— especially thePoles,Russians,Belarusians,Serbs,Ukrainians, andCroats —as "subhumans" (Untermenschen) and planned to exterminate a large number of them through theGeneralplan Ost andHunger Plan.[1][2][3] Slavophobia also emerged twice in theUnited States: the first time was during theProgressive Era, when immigrants fromEastern Europe were met with opposition from the dominant class ofWestern European–origin American citizens; and again during theCold War, when the United States became locked in an intensive global rivalry with theSoviet Union.[4]

By country

[edit]

Albania

[edit]

At the beginning of the 20th century, anti-Slavism inAlbania was developed by the work of theFranciscan friars[citation needed] who had studied in monasteries inAustria-Hungary,[5] after the recentmassacres andexpulsions of Albanians by their Slavic neighbours.[unreliable source?][6] The Albanian intelligentsia proudly asserted, "We Albanians are the original and autochthonous race of the Balkans. The Slavs are conquerors and immigrants who came but yesterday from Asia."[unreliable source?][7] InSoviet historiography, anti-Slavism in Albania was inspired by the Catholic clergy,[citation needed] which opposed the Slavic people because of the role theCatholic clergy[citation needed] and Slavs opposed "rapacious plans of Austro-Hungarian imperialism in Albania".[8]

Italy

[edit]
An emaciated male inmate suffering from severemalnutrition in the ItalianRab concentration camp on the island of Rab in what is nowCroatia. Most of the people who were detained in this camp were Slavs (primarilyCroats andSlovenes).
See also:Anti-Croatian sentiment,Croatia-Italy relations, andItalian fascism and racism § Slavs

In the 1920s,Italian fascists hated theYugoslavs, especially theCroatians andSerbs. They accused the Serbs & Croats of having "atavistic impulses" and they also claimed that the Yugoslavs were conspiring on behalf of "Grand Orient Masonry and its funds". Oneanti-Semitic claim stated that the Serbs were involved in a "social-democratic, masonic Jewish internationalist plot".[9]

Benito Mussolini considered the Slavic race inferior and barbaric.[10][11] He believed that theCroats were a threat to Italy because they wanted to seizeDalmatia, a region which was claimed by Italy, and he also claimed that the threat rallied Italians at the end ofWorld War I: "The danger of seeing the Jugo-Slavians settle along the whole Adriatic shore had caused a bringing together in Rome of the cream of our unhappy regions. Students, professors, workmen, citizens—representative men—were entreating the ministers and the professional politicians."[12] These claims often tended to emphasize the "foreignness" of the Yugoslavs by stating that they were newcomers to the area, unlike the ancient Italians, whose territories were occupied by the Slavs.

CountGaleazzo Ciano, Mussolini's son in law, and the Foreign Minister ofFascist Italy who was later executed by Mussolini, wrote the following entry in his diary:[13]

Vidussoni comes to see me. After having spoken about a few casual things, he makes some political allusions and announces savage plans against the Slovenes. He wants to kill them all. I take the liberty of observing that there are a million of them. "That does not matter." he answers firmly.

Canada

[edit]

In Canada, many xenophobicwhite supremacists were deeply tied to their nation's "Anglo-Saxon" culture, specifically from the early 1900s to the end of World War II. TheKu Klux Klan in Canada was prominent in the provinces ofSaskatchewan andAlberta, both of which have a relatively highEastern European ethnic population. Immigrants fromUkraine, Russia, andPoland were frequently denounced and targeted.[14]

During World War I, thousands ofUkrainian Canadians were seen as "enemy aliens" as Canadiannativists saw them as a "threat" to Canada'sWestern European heritage. Due to this, many of them wereinterned in concentration camps. There was constant discrimination towardsUkrainians who recently immigrated from theAustro-Hungarian Empire.[15]

Germany

[edit]

Though anti-Slavic sentiments reached their peak during Nazi Germany, Germany has had a long history of Slavophobia. In particular, the Germanic people of Prussia often depicted Polish people in a negative light, which paralleled future Slavophobia in the Nazi regime.[16]

Nikolay Ulyanov [ru] in his 1968 article " Замолчанный Маркс" (Hushed-up Marx) provides ample evidence of anti-Slavism the founders ofMarxism,Karl Marx andFriedrich Engels.[17] For example, in his 1849 article "The Magyar Struggle," Engels wrote that the Slavs living in theAustrian Empire were "barbarians" who "needed to be saved" by the Germanic Austrians.[18]

Gustav Freytag's 1855 novelSoll und Haben ("Debt and Credit") was one of the most-read German novels of the 19th century, and contained antisemitic sentiments as well as depictions of Poles as incompetent.[19]

Nazi Germany

[edit]
Cover of the infamousSS brochure "Der Untermensch" published in 1942. 4 million copies of the propaganda pamphlet were printed by Nazi Germany and distributed across occupied territories. The racist booklet portrayedSlavs, Jews and various inhabitants ofEastern Europe as primitive people.[20]

Anti-Slavic racism played a significant role within the ideology ofNazism.[21]Adolf Hitler and theNazi Party held the belief that Slavic countries - particularlyPoland, theSoviet Union, andYugoslavia, as well as their respectivepeoples - were"Untermenschen" (subhumans). According to their viewpoint, these Slavic nations were deemed to beforeign entities and were not considered part of theAryanmaster race. Nazi Germany depicted the Soviet Union as an "Asiatic enemy" of Europeans, in addition to portraying its population as inferior subhumans controlled byJews andcommunists.[22]

Hitler’s autobiographyMein Kampf was openly anti-Slavic. He wrote: “One ought to cast the utmost doubt on the state-building power of the Slavs,” and from the beginning, he rejected the idea of incorporating the Slavs intoGreater Germany.[21][23]

Hitler considered the Slavs to be racially inferior, because, in his view, theBolshevik Revolution had put the Jews in power over the mass of Slavs, who were, by his own definition, incapable of ruling themselves but were instead being ruled by Jewish masters.[24] He considered the development of modern Russia to have been the work of Germanic, not Slavic, elements in the nation, but believed those achievements had been undone and destroyed by theOctober Revolution,[25] inMein Kampf, he wrote, “The organization of a Russian state formation was not the result of the political abilities of the Slavs in Russia, but only a wonderful example of the state-forming efficacity of the German element in an inferior race.”[26]

Because, according to the Nazis,the German people needed more territory to sustain its surplus population, an ideology of conquest and depopulation was formulated forCentral and Eastern Europe according to the principle ofLebensraum, itself based on an older theme in German nationalism which maintained that Germany had a "natural yearning" to expand its borders eastward (Drang Nach Osten).[21] The Nazis' policy towards Slavs was to exterminate or enslave the vast majority of the Slavic population and repopulate their lands with millions of ethnic Germans and other Germanic peoples.[27][28] According to the resulting genocidalGeneralplan Ost, millions of German and other "Germanic" settlers would be moved into the conquered territories, and the original Slavic inhabitants were to be annihilated, removed or enslaved.[21] The policy was focused especially on the Soviet Union, as it alone was deemed capable of providing enough territory to accomplish this goal.[29]

"Hitler gave the already existing ideas of anti-Semitism, anti-Bolshevism andanti-Slavism the form of a genocidal alternative: either we survive or the Jews, Bolsheviks,Slavs – the people of the East – do. Based on theories of a racial hierarchy, he built the directives for an extermination programme aimed at part of the population of Europe andAsia and the creation of a Teutonic “New Order”. ... The concept of NaziLebensraum cannot be fully explained without bluntly stating an important motivational element of his conquests in the East: anti-Slavism."[30]

- Polish historianJerzy Wojciech Borejsza

As part of theGeneralplan Ost, Nazi Germany developed theHunger Plan, a forced starvation programme which involved the seizure of all of the food which was produced on Eastern European lands and the delivery of it to Germany, primarily to the German army. The full implementation of this plan would have ultimately resulted in the starvation and death of 20 to 30 million people (mainly Russians, Belarusians, and Ukrainians). It is estimated that in accordance with this plan, over four million Soviet citizens were starved to death from 1941 to 1944.[31] The resettlement policy reached a much more advanced stage inoccupied Poland because of its immediate proximity to Germany.[21]

For strategic reasons, the Nazis deviated from some of their ideological theories by forging alliances withUkrainian collaborators[citation needed], theIndependent State of Croatia (established after theinvasion of Yugoslavia), theSlovak State (established after theoccupation of Czechoslovakia[citation needed]) andBulgaria. Yugoslav generalMilan Nedić would also lead Nazi Germany'sSerbian puppet government.[32] The Nazis officially justified these alliances by stating that the Croats were "more Germanic than Slav", a notion which was propagated by Croatia's leaderAnte Pavelić, who espoused the view that the "Croats were the descendants of the ancientGoths" who "had thepan-Slavic idea forced upon them as something artificial".[33][34][35] Hitler also believed that the Bulgarians were "Turkoman", while the Czechs and Slovaks wereMongolians in their origins.[34] After conquering Yugoslavia, attention was instead focused on targeting mainly the nation's Jewish and Roma (Gypsy) population.[32]

After Nazi Germany

[edit]

Though Slavophobia became less prevalent after WWII, it still persisted to some degree and still persists today. Slavic immigrants in Germany experience discrimination due to their accents, their surnames, and their cuisine.[36] Sincethe invasion of Ukraine by Russia in 2022, Russian speakers in Germany have faced increased discrimination, including collective blame for Russia's actions in the war, despite most having lived in Germany for decades and many not being Russian at all. Since the Russian language was thelingua franca of the Soviet Union, an immigrant living in Germany who speaks Russian could be from anywhere that was influenced by the Soviet Union.[19]

Greece

[edit]

Traditionally,[when?] inGreece, Slavic people were considered "invaders who separated the glory ofGreek Antiquity, by bringing an era of decline and ruin to Greece – the Dark Ages".[37] In 1913, when Greece took control of Slavic-inhabited areas in Northern Greece, theSlavic toponyms were changed to Greek, and according to the Greek government, this was "the elimination of all the names which pollute and disfigure the beautiful appearance of our fatherland."[38]

Anti-Slavic sentiment escalated during theGreek Civil War, whenMacedonian partisans, who aligned themselves with theDemocratic Army of Greece, were not treated as equals and suffered discrimination everywhere, they were accused of committing a "sin" because they chose to identify themselves as Slavs rather than Greeks.[39] The Macedonian partisans were subjected to threats of extermination, physical attacks, murder, attacks on their settlements, forcible expulsions, restrictions on freedom of movement, and bureaucratic problems, among other discriminatory acts.[39] Although they were allied with the Greek Left, due to their Slavic identity, theMacedonians were viewed with suspicion and animosity by the Greek Left.[40]

In 1948, theDemocratic Army of Greece evacuated tens of thousands ofchild refugees, both Greek and Slavic in origin.[41] In 1985, the refugees were allowed to re-enter Greece, claim Greek citizenship, and reclaim property, but only if they were "Greek by genus", thus prohibiting those with a Slavic identity from obtaining Greek citizenship, entering Greece, and claiming property.[42][43]

Today, the Greek state does not recognize itsethnic Macedonian and otherSlavic minorities, claiming that they do not exist, with Greece therefore having the right not to grant them any of the rights that are guaranteed to them by human-rights treaties.[44]

United States

[edit]

TheUnited States of America has a long history of Slavophobia. Slavophobia began in earnest during the "second wave" of European immigration in the early 1900s, when many people from Southern and Eastern Europe were immigrating to the US.[4] They faced opposition from the "old" immigrants, who were mostly from Northern and Western Europe. These attitudes culminated in theImmigration Act of 1924, which established quotas for and limited the numbers of people from Southern and Eastern European countries who were allowed to enter the US.[45] Slavic peoples were considered to be people of an "inferior race" who were unable to assimilate into American society.[4] They were originally not considered to be "fully white" (and thus fully American), and Slavic peoples' "whiteness" continues to be a debate to this day, but most people consider them to be of Caucasian culture.[46]

Slavophobia in the US ramped up again during theCold War, when Slavic peoples of all nationalities were considered enemies due to the United States' distrust of the Soviet Union.[47] War in the Balkans (which America often had a part in) was considered inevitable due to the Balkan peoples' "propensity for extreme war violence."[47] The United States government, while claiming to advocate for national determination for small countries, has denied national determination to many of the countries in Eastern Europe and the Balkans.[48] As a result, many Slavic people in the US and Western countries felt pressure (and continue to feel pressure) to Anglicize their surnames and downplay their Slavic culture.[49]

In American pop culture, Slavic people (specifically Russians) are usually portrayed as either nefarious, violent criminals[50] or as unintelligent, oblivious comic relief.[51][52]"Dumb Pole" jokes or "Polish jokes" (derogatory jokes towards Polish people) are just one manifestation ofanti-Polish sentiment in America, and can be found in all sorts of media from many time periods.[53]

Slavophobia has had a resurgence in America followingRussia's invasion of Ukraine, where Russian-Americans and people of Russian descent have been collectively blamed for the Russian government's actions.[49][54]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Notes

  1. ^Longerich, Peter (2010).Holocaust: The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. p. 241.ISBN 978-0-19-280436-5.
  2. ^Ingrao, Christian (2015).Intellectuals in the SS War Machine. Translated by Brown, Andrew (English ed.). 65 Bridge Street, Cambridge CB2 1UR, UK: Polity Press. pp. 127–130, 157.ISBN 978-0-7456-6027-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  3. ^Fritz, Stephen G. (2011).Ostkrieg: Hitler's War of Extermination in the East. University Press of Kentucky. pp. 93–95,253–260, 317.ISBN 978-0-8131-3416-1.
  4. ^abcRoucek, Joseph S. “The Image of the Slav in U.S. History and in Immigration Policy.”The American Journal of Economics and Sociology, vol. 28, no. 1, 1969, pp. 29–48.JSTOR,JSTOR 3485555. Accessed 6 Feb. 2024.
  5. ^Detrez, Raymond; Plas, Pieter (2005),Developing cultural identity in the Balkans: convergence vs divergence, Brussels: P.I.E. Peter Lang S.A., p. 220,ISBN 90-5201-297-0,it led to adoption of anti-Slavic component
  6. ^Koliqi, Ernesto & Rahmani, Nazmi (2003).Vepra. Shtëpía Botuese Faik Konica. p. 183.
  7. ^Kolarz, Walter (1972),Myths and realities in eastern Europe, Kennikat Press, p. 227,ISBN 978-0-8046-1600-3,Albanian intelligentsia, despite the backwardness of their country and culture: 'We Albanians are the original and autochthonous race of the Balkans. The Slavs are conquerors and immigrants who came but yesterday from Asia.'
  8. ^Elsie, Robert."Gjergj Fishta, The Voice of The Albanian Nation". Archived fromthe original on 5 June 2011. Retrieved5 April 2011.Great Soviet Encyclopaedia of Moscow... (March 1950): "The literary activities of the Catholic priest Gjergj Fishta reflect the role played by the Catholic clergy in preparing for Italian aggression against Albania. As a former agent of Austro-Hungarian imperialism, Fishta... took a position against the Slavic peoples who opposed the rapacious plans of Austro-Hungarian imperialism in Albania. In his chauvinistic, anti-Slavic poem 'The highland lute,' this spy extolled the hostility of the Albanians towards the Slavic peoples, calling for an open fight against the Slavs".
  9. ^Burgwyn, H. James (1997)Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period, 1918–1940. Greenwood Publishing Group. p.43.
  10. ^Sestani, Armando, ed. (10 February 2012). "Il confine orientale: una terra, molti esodi" [The Eastern Border: One Land, Multiple Exoduses].I profugi istriani, dalmati e fiumani a Lucca [The Istrian, Dalmatian and Rijeka Refugees in Lucca](PDF) (in Italian). Instituto storico della Resistenca e dell'Età Contemporanea in Provincia di Lucca. pp. 12–13.When dealing with such a race as Slavic – inferior and barbarian – we must not pursue the carrot, but the stick policy. We should not be afraid of new victims. The Italian border should run across the Brenner Pass, Monte Nevoso and the Dinaric Alps. I would say we can easily sacrifice 500,000 barbaric Slavs for 50,000 Italians.[permanent dead link]
  11. ^Resistance, Suffering, Hope. The Slovene Partisan Movement 1941-1945, Ljubljana 2008,ISBN 978-961-6681-02-5, p. 27
  12. ^Mussolini, Benito; Child, Richard Washburn;Ascoli, Max; & Lamb, Richard (1988)My rise and fall. New York: Da Capo Press. pp.105–106.
  13. ^Ciano, Galeazzo, conte (2015).The war diaries of Count Galeazzo Ciano 1939–1943. Alan Sutton. [Stroud].ISBN 978-1-78155-448-7.OCLC 910968625.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^"Eastern European Canadians - Minority Rights Group". 19 June 2015.
  15. ^"Ukrainian Internment in Canada | the Canadian Encyclopedia".
  16. ^Jaworska, Sylvia. "Anti-Slavic imagery in German radical nationalist discourse at the turn of the twentieth century: a prelude to Nazi ideology?".Patterns of Prejudice (45):435–452.
  17. ^Nikolay Ylyanov [ru]https://vtoraya-literatura.com/pdf/uljanov_zamolchanny_marx_1969_text.pdf " Замолчанный Маркс" (Hushed-up Marx)], «Возрождение» № 201, 1968, reprinted in 1969 byPossev-Verlag [ru]
  18. ^Engels, Friedrich (January 1849)."The Magyar Struggle".Neue Rheinische Zeitung.
  19. ^abPetersen, Hans-Christian."Between Marginalization and Instrumentalization: Anti-Eastern European and Anti-Slavic Racism | illiberalism.org".www.illiberalism.org/. Retrieved5 February 2024.
  20. ^Sources:
    • Müller, R. Ueberschar, Rolf-Dieter, Gerd (2009).Hitler's war in the East, 1941-1945. 150 Broadway, New York, NY 10038, United States: Berghahn Books. p. 245.ISBN 978-1-84545-501-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
    • "Der Untermensch".Bulmash Family Holocaust Collection. January 1942. Archived fromthe original on 26 November 2020.
    • E. Aschheim, Steven (1992). "8: Nietzsche in the Third Reich".The Nietzsche Legacy in Germany, 1890-1990. Los Angeles, California, United States: University of California Press. pp. 236, 237.ISBN 0-520-08555-8.
  21. ^abcdeBendersky, Joseph W. (2007).A concise history of Nazi Germany Plymouth, U.K.: Rowman & Littlefield.p. 161-2
  22. ^Longerich, Peter (2010).Holocaust: The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. p. 241.ISBN 978-0-19-280436-5.
  23. ^A Ridiculous Hundred Million Slavs: Concerning Adolf Hitler's World-viewJerzy Wojciech Borejsza, page 41, Wydawnictwo Neriton and Instytut Historii Polskiej Akademii Nauk, 2006
  24. ^Megargee, Geoffrey P. (2007).War of Annihilation: Combat And Genocide on the Eastern Front, 1941. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 4–.ISBN 978-0-7425-4482-6.
  25. ^Bendersky, Joseph W. (2000)A History of Nazi Germany: 1919–1945. Plymouth, UK: Rowman & Littlefield. p.177.
  26. ^Martyn Housden,Hitler: Study of a Revolutionary?, page 36.
  27. ^Housden, Martyn (2000).Hitler: Study of a Revolutionary?. Taylor & Francis. pp. 138–.ISBN 978-0-415-16359-0.
  28. ^Perrson, Hans-Åke & Stråth, Bo (2007).Reflections on Europe: Defining a Political Order in Time and Space. Peter Lang. pp. 336–.ISBN 978-90-5201-065-6.
  29. ^Hitler, Adolf (1926).Mein Kampf, Chapter XIV: Eastern Orientation or Eastern Policy. Quote: "If we speak of soil [to be conquered for German settlement] in Europe today, we can primarily have in mind only Russia and her vassal border states."
  30. ^Borejsza, Jerzy W. (2017).A ridiculous hundred million Slavs: Concerning Adolf Hitler's world-view. Translated by French, David. Warsaw, Poland: Polskiej Akademii Nauk. p. 176.ISBN 978-83-63352-88-2.
  31. ^Snyder, Timothy (2010)Bloodlands: Europe between Hitler and Stalin. New York: Basic Books. p.411.
  32. ^ab"Axis Invasion Of Yugoslavia". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved7 November 2022.
  33. ^Rich, Norman (1974)Hitler's War Aims: the Establishment of the New Order. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. p.276-7.
  34. ^abHitler, Adolf and Gerhard, Weinberg (2007).Hitler's Table Talk, 1941–1944: His Private Conversations. Enigma Books. p.356. Quoting Hitler: "For example to label the Bulgarians as Slavs is pure nonsense; originally they were Turkomans."
  35. ^Davies, Norman (2008)Europe at War 1939–1945: No Simple Victory. Pan Macmillan. pp.167,209.
  36. ^Zingher, Erica (22 November 2020)."Jüdische Kontingentflüchtlinge: Was wächst auf Beton?".Die Tageszeitung: taz (in German).ISSN 0931-9085. Retrieved5 February 2024.
  37. ^Curta, Florin (30 January 2011).The Edinburgh History of the Greeks, c. 500 to 1050. Edinburgh University Press. p. 3.doi:10.3366/edinburgh/9780748638093.001.0001.ISBN 978-0-7486-3809-3.But during and after theCivil War of 1943-1949, the 'Slavs' themselves became a national enemy. Throughout the Civil War, the Slav Macedonians of northern Greece made an important contribution to theCommunist cause. A strong link was thus established between national identity and political orientation, as the Civil War and the subsequent defeat of theleft-wing movement turned Slav Macedonians into theSudetens of Greece (Augustinos 1989: 23). By 1950, those embracing the ideology of the right saw their political rivals as the embodiment of everything that was anti-national, Communist, and Slavic. To hold Fallmerayeran views thus became a crimen laesae maiestatis. Dionysios A. Zakythinos, the author of the first monograph on medieval Slavs in Greece, wrote of the Dark Ages separating Antiquity from the Middle Ages as an era of decline and ruin which was brought by Slavic invaders (Zakythinos 1945: 72 and 1966: 300, 302 and 316). In the United States, Peter Charanis regarded EmperorNikephoros I as the hero who saved Greece fromSlavonicisation (Charanis 1946). The early medieval Slavs thus became a historiographic problem, to slavikon zetema.
  38. ^Danforth, Loring M (1995).The Macedonian conflict : ethnic nationalism in a transnational world. Princeton University Press. p. 69.ISBN 0-691-04357-4.OCLC 32237371.
  39. ^abRossos, Andrew (1997). "Incompatible Allies: Greek Communism and Macedonian Nationalism in the Civil War in Greece, 1943–1949".The Journal of Modern History.69 (1): 56.doi:10.1086/245440.ISSN 0022-2801.S2CID 143512864.The terror campaign which was unleashed after Varkiza against the entire Left by the Greek Right was directed with special vehemence against the Macedonians. In addition to the ideological "treachery" of supporting EAM-ELAS, they were attacked for committing the ultimate "sin" of not being, or rather not considering themselves, Greeks. They were condemned as Bulgars, komitajis, collaborators, autonomists, Sudetens of the Balkans, and so forth, and threatened with extermination.
  40. ^Rossos, Andrew (1997). "Incompatible Allies: Greek Communism and Macedonian Nationalism in the Civil War in Greece, 1943–1949".The Journal of Modern History.69 (1):42–43.doi:10.1086/245440.ISSN 0022-2801.S2CID 143512864.
  41. ^Danforth, Loring M. (1995).The Macedonian conflict : ethnic nationalism in a transnational world. Princeton, NJ: Princeton Univ. Press. p. 54.ISBN 0-691-04357-4.OCLC 243828619.
  42. ^Denying ethnic identity : the Macedonians of Greece. Human Rights Watch/Helsinki (Organization : U.S.). New York: Human Rights Watch. 1994. p. 27.ISBN 1-56432-132-0.OCLC 30643687.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  43. ^"Press Release".
  44. ^European Commission Against Racism and Intolerance (2009). "ECRI REPORT ON GREECE (Fourth Monitoring Cycle)".Council of Europe: 62.
  45. ^Magazine, Smithsonian; Diamond, Anna."The 1924 Law That Slammed the Door on Immigrants and the Politicians Who Pushed it Back Open".Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved6 February 2024.
  46. ^"Not Quite White: Arabs, Slavs, and the Contours of Contested Whiteness | Silk Road Cultural Center".silkroadculturalcenter.org. Retrieved6 February 2024.
  47. ^abMichail, Eugene. “Western Attitudes to War in the Balkans and the Shifting Meanings of Violence, 1912-91.”Journal of Contemporary History, vol. 47, no. 2, 2012, pp. 219–39.JSTOR,JSTOR 23249185. Accessed 6 Feb. 2024.
  48. ^Kuhner, Jeffrey T."Acute Slavophobia".Washington Times.
  49. ^abBrooks, Hannah (2 May 2022)."Opinion | My child's grandparents didn't want her to have their Russian surname. Now I get why".NBC News. Retrieved6 February 2024.
  50. ^"'I Want You To Off Azimoff!' -- East European Stereotypes On U.S. TV".Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 5 September 2012. Retrieved6 February 2024.
  51. ^Raskin, Hanna Rachel (11 April 2007)."For make benefit writer of remarkable satiric novel".Mountain Xpress. Retrieved6 February 2024.
  52. ^Orlova, Olesya Gennadievna (2021)."The American Movies As A Discourse And A Sourсe Of Russian Stereotypes".European Proceedings. European Proceedings of Social and Behavioural Sciences. Language and Technology in the Interdisciplinary Paradigm:123–136.doi:10.15405/epsbs.2021.12.17.
  53. ^"The Anatomy of a Polish Joke".Culture.pl. Retrieved6 February 2024.
  54. ^Umbrasko, Ricards."Beyond Ukraine: The West Has an Eastern Europe Problem | Opinion | The Harvard Crimson".www.thecrimson.com. Retrieved6 February 2024.

Further reading

[edit]

Examples of anti-Slavic literature

[edit]
  • Zecker, Robert M. "“A Slav Can Live in Dirt That Would Kill a White Man”: Race and the European “Other”." Race and America's Immigrant Press: How the Slovaks were Taught to Think Like White People. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2011. 68–102.

Bloomsbury Collections. Web. 5 Oct. 2021.http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781628928273.ch-004

Forms
Attributes
Social
Religious
Race / Ethnicity
Manifestations
Discriminatory
policies
Countermeasures
Related topics
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Anti-Slavic_sentiment&oldid=1282781286"
Category:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp