'Ukraine is unlikely ever to return to the Russian Empire': in a new book, Mark Edele unpacks what's at stake in a bloody war
- Written by The Conversation

“The whole story” is an unexpected subtitle for a book by a historian. We have long been alert to the fact that, faced with the boundless chaos of empirical facts, historians make selections.
Review: Russia’s War Against Ukraine: The Whole Story – Mark Edele (MUP).
In order to make intelligible narratives, they propose causes and effects. Their accounts imply interpretations and, inevitably, evaluations. The number of potential “stories” about a given topic is infinite.
Historian Mark Edele, author of Stalinism at War: The Soviet Union in World War II, The Soviet Union: A Short History and several other highly regarded books, knows this well. His subtitle is a provocation: it accuses his academic field – call it Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies, or Slavic and East European Studies, or Eurasian Studies – of telling us what is patently not the whole story of the Russia-Ukraine relationship.
Edele, along with historian Rebecca Friedman, has begun editing a new series of short books for Cambridge University Press dedicated to “decolonising Soviet history”. By decentralising this history away from Moscow, they write,
contributions will both decolonize Soviet history and provincialize the former metropole: Russia.[…] Why is this worth doing? Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine has further amplified voices in our field who have called for a ‘decolonization’ of our thinking, writing, and teaching about the former Soviet space. This is an urgent matter.
These words were addressed to scholars. Edele’s new book Russia’s War Against Ukraine, by contrast, is chiefly written for non-specialists. The book makes its argument of decolonisation by implication, treating Ukrainian realia as things-in-themselves rather than peripheral parts of an essentially Russian whole.