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Professor Roger Markwick

Honorary Professor

School of Humanities, Creative Ind and Social Sci (History)

The politics of history

Roger Markwick, Professor of Modern European History and founding member of the Centre for the History of Violence believes the way we frame our past is pivotal for our understanding of the present.

Associate Professor Roger Markwick

George Orwell's famous quote: "He who controls the past controls the future. He who controls the present controls the past (1984)," holds particular resonance for European historian Professor Roger Markwick, whose analysis of the role of Soviet historians and historical writing in the twentieth century has important implications for current times.

As a specialist in modern Russian and Soviet history and historiography, with other interests in European fascism, genocide, and colonial settler states, a central theme of Markwick's research is how historical discourse can influence not just the way a society views itself, but its very survival.

In studying the driving forces behind the October 1917 revolution that gave birth to Soviet society, and its subsequent demise, Markwick investigated how historiography in the Soviet Union became politicised to the extent that the party-controlled version of events became intrinsic to the longevity of the Stalin regime.

The crudest mechanisms of censorship during the Stalin era included the closure of archives, banning of original research, forced adherence to historical texts which celebrated Stalin, and the terrorising, jailing and execution of historians who did not agree with the received historical wisdom.

Under Gorbachev's perestroika, the history and the mythology that had grown up around it were challenged, playing an important part in the unravelling of the Soviet Union.

"For the first time historians began to act as independent scholars, dismantling the mythology around Stalin and, by association, Lenin – thus weakening the ideology of the system itself," Markwick said.

"What fascinates me is the degree to which history and historians can play a part in either legitimating the status quo or de-legitimating it. History was politically pivotal in the old Soviet system. It remains so today in post-Soviet Russia, particularly the traumatic history of the Second World War Eastern Front, which has now become a research focus for me.

"But much the same can be said for the way history frames national identity in other countries with a violent history, such as Germany, Italy and even Australia. Here, the Anzac legend has achieved almost sacred status and those who challenge it are met with the ire of conservative politicians and public opinion. These arguments about the past have such important implications for our understanding of the present. Often as not, patriotic narratives born of war mask dark deeds, past and present."

Approaching history from a Marxist perspective, a key theme of much of Markwick's research is the social underpinnings of Soviet society that meant, despite the appalling violence of the Stalinist state against its own people and supporters, so many remained loyal to it, especially during the Second World War.

"When people look at the collapse of the Soviet Union, they might express surprise it lasted as long as it did; considering its traumatic, violent history," he said.

"I have always been interested in the question of why this huge social experiment went so badly wrong. I have never been satisfied with answers that rested on the simple view that the socialist aspirations of the revolution were flawed from the beginning, or that it could all be explained by the diabolical character of Stalin."

One way he has attempted to answer that question is to look at the role of historical narratives, not only as instruments to stifle political thought, but also to critique or reinvigorate society.

In researching his PhD, Markwick was lucky enough to obtain extraordinary access to living Soviet historians and historical archives in the aftermath of the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s.

Interviewing historians who had played such a crucial role under Khrushchev and Gorbachev was some of the most challenging and exciting research he has undertaken. His thesis, awarded in 1995 by the University of Sydney, focused on the role these historians had played. It also led to his book – Rewriting History in Soviet Russia: The Politics of Revisionist Historiography 1956-74 (Palgrave Macmillan 2001), which won The Alexander Nove Prize in Russian, Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies in 2001.

More daunting was the archival research required for his recent major book, the first comprehensive study of the military role of Soviet women in the Second World War, supported by an Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery Project grant.

With much of the sources involving military history, and given the centrality of 'The Great Patriotic War, 1941-45' to Russia, archival access was difficult if not impossible. However, with persistence Markwick was able to publish his book Soviet Women on the Frontline in the Second World War (Palgrave Macmillan 2012). Co-authored with Dr Euridice Charon Cardona, this book – which delves into why nearly one million women were willing to risk life and limb, seemingly in defence of such a draconian state – was shortlisted for a 2013 NSW Premier's History Award.

He has returned to this theme, this time looking at the motives and mechanisms that drove millions of Soviet women to labour in the most appalling conditions on the home front in the Second World War. Again supported by the ARC, this is a collaborative project with leading German historian Professor Beate Fieseler of Heinrich-Heine-Universität, Düsseldorf.

Markwick is passionate about history and the importance of the humanities and social sciences in general: "The humanities and social sciences not only equip people to be skilled members of the workforce but above all to be articulate, active citizens and participants in their own society."

Associate Professor Roger Markwick

The politics of history

Head of the School of Humanities and Social Science and founding member of the Centre for the History of Violence believes the way we frame our past is pivotal

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Career Summary

Biography

Professor Roger Markwick joined The University of Newcastle in 2001, lecturing in modern European history, specialising in modern Russian and Soviet history. He is Head of the School of Humanities and Social Science.

Markwick was awarded his PhD in 1995 by the University of Sydney, where he was a Postdoctoral Fellow and Senior Research Associate.

He is the author of Rewriting History in Soviet Russia: The Politics of Revisionist Historiography 1956-74 (Palgrave Macmillan 2001), which won The Alexander Nove Prize in Russian, Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies in 2001. He also co-authored, with Graeme Gill, of Russia’s Stillborn Democracy? From Gorbachev to Yeltsin (Oxford University Press, 2000). More recently, Markwick co-authored, with Euridice Charon-Cardona, Soviet Women on the Frontline in the Second World War (Palgrave Macmillan 2012).

Markwick is currently undertaking an Australian Research Council (ARC) supported project on ‘Women, Stalinism, and the Soviet Home Front, 1941-45’, in collaboration with Prof. Dr. Beate Fieseler, Heinrich-Heine-Universität, Düsseldorf.

His additional research and teaching interests are in the nature of fascism; the Jewish Holocaust; Israel and the Middle East; colonial settler states; intellectuals, historiography and the politics of knowledge.

Research Expertise
Focus Area: History 

Qualifications

  • PhD, University of Sydney
  • Bachelor of Arts, Australian National University
  • Diploma in Education, University of Melbourne
  • Master of Arts, University of Melbourne

Keywords

  • Israel
  • Russian and Soviet history
  • fascism
  • historiography
  • modern European history
  • women and war

Languages

  • Russian (Fluent)

Professional Experience

Academic appointment

Dates Title Organisation / Department
1/1/2006 -  IntReader (expert reader of high international standing) ARC (Australian Research Council)
1/1/1990 - 31/12/2015 Membership - Australasian Association of European Historians Australasian Association of European Historians
Australia

Awards

Research Award

Year Award
2003 Alexander Nove Prize for Russian and East European Studies for 2001
British Association for Slavonic and East European Studies (United Kingdom)

Invitations

Speaker

Year Title / Rationale
2011 'We will never get to the front': Soviet Women under Arms in the Great Fatherland War, 1941-45
Organisation: University of Duesseldorf Description: Invitation to present to Oberseminar from Prof. Dr Beate Fieseler
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Publications

For publications that are currently unpublished or in-press, details are shown in italics.


Book (6 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2023 Markwick R, Charon Cardona E, Soviet Women on the Frontline in the Second World War [Japanese edition ], Toyo Shoten-Shinsha, Tokyo (2023)
2021 Gill GJ, Markwick RD, The Russian Revolution and Stalinism, Routledge, 190 (2021)
2019 The Soviet Home Front 1941-1945: Everyday Life in Wartime., ROSSPEN, Moscow (2019)
2012 Markwick RD, Charon-Cardona ET, Soviet Women on the Frontline in the Second World War, Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, 336 (2012) [A1]
Citations Scopus - 49
Co-authors Euridice Charon-Cardona
2001 Markwick RD, Rewriting History in Soviet Russia: The Politics of Revisionist Historiography, 1956-1974, Palgrave, Basingstoke UK & New York (2001) [A1]
2000 Gill G, Markwick RD, Russia's Stillborn Democracy? From Gorbachev to Yeltsin, Oxford University Press, London, UK, 280 (2000) [A1]
Show 3 more books

Chapter (15 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2020 Markwick R, 'Failures and Successes: Soviet and Chinese State-Socialist Reforms in the Face of Global Capitalism', 30 Years since the Fall of the Berlin Wall. Turns and Twists in Economies, Politics, and Societies in the Post-Communist Countries, Palgrave Macmillan, Singapore 327-351 (2020) [B1]
DOI 10.1007/978-981-15-0317-7
2019 Markwick R, Fieseler B, '"Every Log a Blow to the Enemy!". Women in the Wartime Timber Industry', The Soviet Home Front 1941-1945: Everyday Life in Wartime., ROSSPEN, Moscow 103-125 (2019) [B1]
2019 Markwick R, Fieseler B, 'Introduction', The Soviet Home Front 1941-1945: Everyday Life in Wartime., ROSSPEN, Moscow 5-24 (2019) [B1]
2019 Markwick R, ' Violence to Velvet: A Century of Revolutions 1917 to 2017 ', Reform, Revolution and Crisis in Europe Landmarks in History, Memory and Thought, Routledge, London 83-104 (2019) [B1]
2018 Markwick RD, ' The Motherland Calls : Soviet Women in the Great Patriotic War, 1941-45', Palgrave Handbook on Women and Gender in Twentieth-Century Russia and the Soviet Union, Palgrave McMillan, UK, London 215-230 (2018) [B1]
Citations Scopus - 1
2017 Markwick RD, 'Post-Soviet Russian Memoirs of the Second World War', War Stories: The War Memoir in History and Literature, Berghahn Books, New York & Oxford 143-167 (2017) [B1]
2016 Markwick RD, Doumanis N, 'The Nationalization of the Masses', The Oxford Handbook of European History 1914-1945, Oxford University Press, New York, NY 365-387 (2016) [B1]
DOI 10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199695669.013.21
2012 Markwick RD, 'The great patriotic war in Soviet and post-Soviet collective memory', The Oxford Handbook of Postwar European History, Oxford University Press, Oxford 692-713 (2012) [B1]
DOI 10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199560981.013.0035
Citations Scopus - 24
2010 Markwick RD, 'A. IA. Gurevich's contribution to Soviet and Russian historiography: From social-psychology to historical anthropology', 41-67 (2010)
DOI 10.1163/ej.9789004186507.i-392.8
2009 Markwick RD, 'Communism: Fascism's 'other'?', The Oxford Handbook of Fascism, Oxford University Press, Oxford 339-361 (2009) [B1]
2009 Markwick RD, 'Women, war and 'totalitarianism': The Soviet and Nazi experiences compared', Peace, War and Gender from Antiquity to the Present: Cross-Cultural Perspectives, Klartext Verlag, Essen, Germany 235-251 (2009) [B1]
2006 Markwick RD, 'Thaws and freezes in Soviet historiography, 1953-64', The Dilemmas of De-Stalinization: negotiating cultural and social change in the Khrushchev era, Routledge, London 173-192 (2006) [B1]
Citations Scopus - 3
2006 Markwick RD, 'Thaws and freezes in Soviet historiography, 1953 64', The Dilemmas of De-Stalinization: Negotiating Cultural and Social Change in the Khrushchev Era 173-192 (2006)

Nothing illustrates more vividly the ambivalent nature of Nikita Khrushchev¿s de-Stalinization than the fate of Soviet historiography in his time. Stalin¿s death, and especially K... [more]

Nothing illustrates more vividly the ambivalent nature of Nikita Khrushchev¿s de-Stalinization than the fate of Soviet historiography in his time. Stalin¿s death, and especially Khrushchev¿s denunciation of Stalin in his Secret Speech at the 20th Party Congress (1956), had emboldened professional historians to critique historical writing. They did so within the bounds of of¿cial Marxism-Leninism, but even this was too threatening for Khrushchev and his circle. Fearful of unleashing the ¿oodgates of historical revisionism, initial attempts to revisit and reinvigorate Soviet history were soon quashed by the party leadership. But the 20th Party Congress had spurred a rethinking of historiography that had a momentum of its own, which was to be given renewed, if short-lived, impetus by the 22nd Party Congress. It would take the removal of Khrushchev himself in October 1964 by the neo-Stalinists around Leonid Brezhnev to deliver a decisive blow to historical revisionism. This chapter will examine historiographical developments, chie¿y among professional historians, and their interaction with the political processes of the Khrushchev period.

DOI 10.4324/9780203536957-21
2005 Markwick RD, 'Revolution', Companion to Women's Historical Writing, Palgrave Macmillan, Hampshire, UK 475-484 (2005) [B2]
1999 Markwick RD, 'Precursor to perestroika - The 'Democratic' partkom, Institute of History, Soviet Academy of Sciences, 1965-68', , ST MARTINS PRESS INC 185-206 (1999)
Show 12 more chapters

Journal article (24 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2023 Markwick R, 'Die Ukraine und die grossrussische Macht Rakowski gegen Stalin, 1922-23', Marxistiche Blätter, 87-95 (2023)
2023 Markwick R, 'Christian Rakovsky s Life and Death Mirrored the Fate of European Marxism', Jacobin, (2023)
2023 Markwick R, 'Ukraine and Great Russian power: Christian Rakovsky versus Joseph Stalin, 1922-23', Historical Materialism: research in critical Marxist theory, (2023) [C1]
2023 Markwick R, 'Boris Kagarlitzki im Auge des Orkans', Marxistische Blätter, 60 141-146 (2023)
2022 Markwick R, ' Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and Nationality : Putin s Remaking of Imperial Russia', Arena Quarterly, 19-27 (2022) [C1]
2022 Markwick R, ' Every Log a Blow to the Enemy! Women in the Soviet Wartime Timber Industry, 1941 1945', Europe-Asia Studies, 75 373-398 (2022) [C1]
DOI 10.1080/09668136.2021.2020729
2019 Markwick RD, 'War, Violence and the Making of the Stalinist State: A Tillyian Analysis', EUROPE-ASIA STUDIES, 71 907-931 (2019) [C1]
DOI 10.1080/09668136.2019.1637400
2019 Gill G, Markwick RD, 'Introduction: Stalinism as State Building', Europe-Asia Studies, 71 883-891 (2019) [C1]
DOI 10.1080/09668136.2019.1634864
2019 Charon Cardona E, Markwick RD, 'The kitchen garden movement on the Soviet home front, 1941 1945', Journal of Historical Geography, 64 47-59 (2019) [C1]
DOI 10.1016/j.jhg.2018.12.006
Citations Scopus - 7Web of Science - 5
Co-authors Euridice Charon-Cardona
2018 Markwick RD, 'Bolshevism, Balfour and Zionism: A tale of two centenaries', MR online, (2018) [C1]
2017 Markwick RD, 'Violence to Velvet: Revolutions 1917 to 2017', Slavic Review: SPECIAL ISSUE: 1917-2017, THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION A HUNDRED YEARS LATER, 76 600-609 (2017) [C1]
DOI 10.1017/slr.2017.167
Citations Scopus - 3Web of Science - 6
2016 Dwyer P, Lewis M, Markwick R, 'War, Violence, Aftermaths: Europe and the Wider World', AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF POLITICS AND HISTORY, 62 497-500 (2016)
DOI 10.1111/ajph.12299
Co-authors Philip Dwyer
2014 Markwick RD, 'Censorship and Fear: Historical Research in the Soviet Union', Groniek. Historisch Tijdschrift, 201 371-386 (2014) [C1]
2013 Fieseler B, Markwick R, 'Rear area in the great patriotic war (1941-1945): Red army men's wives and families struggle for survival in Yaroslavl', Bylye Gody, 28 58-60 (2013) [C1]

The heroic image of the Red Army soldier answering the call of the Motherland to defend her in the Great Patriotic War against fascism has masked the harsh reality of life for the... [more]

The heroic image of the Red Army soldier answering the call of the Motherland to defend her in the Great Patriotic War against fascism has masked the harsh reality of life for their wives and families they left behind on the home front. Wartime propaganda claimed that soldiers' families were being well looked after. But documents from Yaroslavl' archives suggest that the wives and families of ordinary soldiers and officers struggled to survive on the 'second' home front, especially if they had to care for young children.

Citations Scopus - 1
2009 Cardona EC, Markwick RD, ''Our brigade will not be sent to the front': Soviet Women under arms in the Great Fatherland War, 1941-45', Russian Review, 68 240-262 (2009) [C1]
DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9434.2009.00523.x
Citations Scopus - 7Web of Science - 3
Co-authors Euridice Charon-Cardona
2008 Markwick RD, ''A Sacred Duty': Red Army women veterans remembering the Great Fatherland War, 1941-1945', Australian Journal of Politics and History, 54 403-420 (2008) [C1]
DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8497.2008.00506.x
Citations Scopus - 13Web of Science - 11
2006 Markwick RD, 'Cultural History under Khrushchev and Brezhnev: From Social Psychlogy to Mentalites', The Russian Review, 65 283-301 (2006) [C1]
DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9434.2005.00400.x
Citations Scopus - 12Web of Science - 13
2003 Markwick RD, 'George Enteen's review of Roger D. Markwick's book on rewriting history in Soviet Russia - A reply', SLAVIC REVIEW, 62 234-235 (2003)
DOI 10.1017/S0037677900031399
Citations Web of Science - 1
2002 Markwick RD, 'Stalinism at war (Soviet Union during World War II)', KRITIKA-EXPLORATIONS IN RUSSIAN AND EURASIAN HISTORY, 3 509-520 (2002)
DOI 10.1353/kri.2002.0042
Citations Web of Science - 3
1999 Markwick RD, 'What kind of state is the Russian state - if there is one?', Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics, 15 111-130 (1999)

The stalling of Russia's transition to capitalism and the apparent ineffectiveness of its presidential regime raises important questions about the nature of the Russian state... [more]

The stalling of Russia's transition to capitalism and the apparent ineffectiveness of its presidential regime raises important questions about the nature of the Russian state and its apparatus. Paradoxically, it seems to have connived in the demise of Russia as a nation and world power and even in its own instruments of governance. To understand this self-destructive process it is necessary to look beyond the trappings of Russian democracy and focus on the apparatuses of political power. Several typologies of the Russian state have been advanced. To analyse it, however, requires not only looking at the internal dynamics of the Yeltsin regime but also locating it in the larger correlation of domestic social forces and Russia's place in the international capitalist system.

DOI 10.1080/13523279908415422
Citations Scopus - 6
1999 Markwick RD, 'Activist academic: Lloyd Churchward as a labour intellectual.', Labour History, 27-43 (1999)
Citations Scopus - 1
1996 Markwick RD, 'A discipline in transition?: From sovietology to 'transitology'', Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics, 12 255-276 (1996)

The collapse of the Soviet system and its partners in the 'communist' world poses problems of theory for scholars, as well as practical problems of managing a transition... [more]

The collapse of the Soviet system and its partners in the 'communist' world poses problems of theory for scholars, as well as practical problems of managing a transition to a new social, political and economic system on the part of the peoples and governments concerned. Previous understanding of the nature of the 'communist' system has come under fresh scrutiny, with 'totalitarianism', 'socialism', 'communism' and other concepts in the established literature of sovietology giving way to fresh analysis, as scholars attempt to come to terms with the collapse and the transition. There are limits to the value of studies of 'comparative democratization': in fact, the proximity of the system undergoing transition to the core of the capitalist and liberal-democratic world is a critical variable in the transition. The role of the state in the transition is likewise crucial, and needs to be carefully studied. These features require the substitution of comparative study for the ghetto style of research that characterized approaches to the former communist system.

DOI 10.1080/13523279608415313
Citations Scopus - 16
1994 Markwick RD, 'Catalyst of Historiography, Marxism and Dissidence: The Sector of Methodology, Institute of History, Soviet Academy of Sciences, 1964-68', Europe-Asia Studies, 46 579-596 (1994)
Citations Scopus - 11Web of Science - 8
1990 MARKWICK RD, 'PEACEFUL COEXISTENCE, DETENTE AND THIRD-WORLD STRUGGLES - THE SOVIET VIEW, FROM LENIN TO BREZHNEV', AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS, 44 171-194 (1990)
DOI 10.1080/10357719008445031
Citations Scopus - 2Web of Science - 2
Show 21 more journal articles

Review (25 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2022 Markwick R, 'Revising the Revolution: The Unmaking of Russia's Official History (2022)
2020 Markwick RD, 'Mark Edele gets embroiled in the historiography of Stalinism (2020)
DOI 10.1080/14490854.2020.1840298
2018 Markwick RD, 'Leningrad 1941 1942. Morality of a City under Siege. By Sergey Yarov. Foreword by John Barber. Translated by Arch Tait (Cambridge, UK and Malden, USA: Polity Press, 2017) (2018)
2018 Markwick RD, 'Nikolai Bolkhovitinov and American Studies in the USSR: People's Diplomacy in the Cold War', AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW (2018)
DOI 10.1093/ahr/rhy287
2018 Markwick RD, 'Leningrad 1941-1942. Morality of a City under Siege', AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF POLITICS AND HISTORY (2018)
DOI 10.1111/ajph.12444
2016 Markwick RD, 'TIME TRAVELLERS Tom Griffiths' new book on historians and their craft (2016)
2016 Markwick RD, 'Stalin. New Biography of a Dictator. By Oleg V. Khlevniuk. Translated by Nora Seligman Favorov (New Haven and London: Yale university Press, 2015) (2016)
2014 Markwick RD, 'Trotsky in Norway. Exile, 1935-1937.', AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF POLITICS AND HISTORY (2014)
2014 Markwick RD, 'The Damned and the Dead: The Eastern Front Through the Eyes of Soviet and Russian Novelists', New Zealand Slavonic Journal (2014)
2013 Markwick RD, 'Roads to the Temple: Truth, Memory, Ideas and Ideals in the Making of the Russian Revolution, 1987-1991', SLAVONICA (2013)
2013 Markwick RD, 'War, Evacuation, and the Exercise of Power: The Center, Periphery, and Kirov's Pedagogical Institute, 1941-1952.', AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW (2013) [C3]
DOI 10.1093/ahr/118.5.1638
2011 Markwick RD, 'Russian Politics: From Lenin to Putin', AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF POLITICS AND HISTORY (2011)
2011 Markwick RD, 'Soviet Women in Combat: A History of Violence on the Eastern Front', RUSSIAN REVIEW (2011)
2011 Markwick RD, 'Review - Soviet women in combat: A history of violence on the eastern front', Russian Review (2011) [C3]
DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9434.2011.00601.x
2011 Markwick RD, 'Review: Russian politics: From Lenin to Putin', Australian Journal of Politics and History (2011) [C3]
2010 Markwick RD, 'Zhivago's Children: The Last Russian Intelligentsia', AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW (2010) [C3]
DOI 10.1086/ahr.115.5.1555
2010 Markwick RD, 'Our unswerving loyalty: A documentary survey of relations between the Communist Party of Australia and Moscow, 1920-1940', Australian Journal of Politics and History (2010) [C3]
2009 Markwick RD, 'Political tourists: Travellers from Australia to the Soviet Union in the 1920s-1940s', Australian Journal of Politics and History (2009) [C3]
DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8497.2009.1527a.x
2009 Markwick RD, 'They fought for the motherland: Russia's women soldiers in World War I and the Revolution', Slavonic and East European Review (2009) [C3]
2003 Markwick RD, 'Elizabeth A Wood - The Baba and the Comrade: Gender and Politics in Revolutionary Russia', Journal of Interdisciplinary Gender Studies (2003) [C3]
2002 Markwick RD, 'Stalinism at War', Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History (2002) [D1]
2001 Markwick RD, 'Russia and the Idea of the West: Gorbachev, Intellectuals and the End of the Cold War', Europe-Asia Studies (2001) [C3]
1998 Markwick RD, 'Soviet history in the Yeltsin era.', EUROPE-ASIA STUDIES (1998)
1997 Markwick RD, 'Kremlin capitalism: Privatizing the Russian economy.', AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS (1997)
1997 Markwick RD, 'The OMRI Annual Survey of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union 1995: Building democracy - OpenMediaResInst', EUROPE-ASIA STUDIES (1997)
DOI 10.1080/09668139708412490
Show 22 more reviews

Conference (3 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2015 Markwick RD, Fieseler B, 'Evacuees and social stress on the Soviet home front: The Iaroslavl' experience, 1941', Bylye Gody (2015) [C1]

This article examines the everyday experiences of evacuees and how Iaroslavl' residents and authorities dealt with the resulting social stresses and challenges amidst the exi... [more]

This article examines the everyday experiences of evacuees and how Iaroslavl' residents and authorities dealt with the resulting social stresses and challenges amidst the exigencies of total war. It does so primarily on the basis of reports and data from Iaroslavl' district communist party organisations, held in the Center for the Documentation of Contemporary History of the Iaroslavl' Region State Archive (TsDNI GAIaO), on =accommodating' (razemeshchenie) evacuees in the region. Comparison between these reports and Sovnarkom resolutions on the way evacuees were supposed to be dealt with and the resources allocated to them reveals a wide gap between official expectations and the harsh reality of life for the evacuees, especially children. The article concentrates on the critical summer and autumn of 1941, which saw a flood of evacuees, women and children, the elderly and sick, followed by a further influx as the enemy threatened Moscow and even Iaroslavl' itself, necessitating re-evacuations, children in particular, by water and rail.

Citations Web of Science - 1
2004 Markwick RD, 'Diary of a 'Night Witch': the Making of a Soviet Woman Flyer in the Great Patriotic War, 1941-45', Europe's Pasts and Presents:, Brisbane, Queensland (2004) [E1]
2003 Markwick RD, 'Stalinism at War: Moscow, June-December 1941', Writing Europe's Pasts, Auckland, New Zealand (2003) [E1]

Other (10 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2021 Markwick R, 'Misreading History', Letter to editor in response to Between Two Evils ( issue.1). Paris (2021)
2017 Markwick RD, 'The sacralisation of history and state legitimation', (2017)
2016 Markwick RD, 'Irina Rakobolskaya obituary', (2016)
2016 Markwick RD, 'A New Cold War? Russia, NATO and US power', . Melbourne, Australia: Arena (2016)
2005 Markwick R, 'Through Children''s Eyes', : The Australian newspaper (2005) [O1]
2005 Markwick R, 'Night Witches and Amazons', : The Australian newspaper (2005) [O1]
2005 Markwick R, 'Stalin', : The Australian newspaper (2005) [O1]
2003 Markwick RD, 'Nikolai Alexandrovich Bulganin, Roy Alexandrovich Medvedev, Anastas Ivanovich Mikoyan, Nikolai Viktorovich Podgorny, Boris Kharitonovich Ponomarev', ( issue.November 2003 pp.1): Macmillan Reference USA (2003) [C3]
2003 Markwick RD, 'To the Editor: George Enteen's review of my book, rewriting history in Soviet Russia:', ( issue.Spring 2003 pp.234-235): American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, Inc. (2003) [C3]
2002 Markwick RD, 'Letter in response to review of Rewriting History in Soviet Russia: The Politics of Revisionist Historiography in the Soviet Union, 1956-1974', ( pp.234-235): American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, Inc. (2002) [C3]
Show 7 more others
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Grants and Funding

Summary

Number of grants 18
Total funding $765,805

Click on a grant title below to expand the full details for that specific grant.


20181 grants / $15,000

Alternative Futures and Regional Prospects Research Network: Working across Differences, beyond Carbon, Capital and Commodity$15,000

Funding body: University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts

Funding body University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts
Project Team

Dr S.A Hamed Hosseini, Emeritus Professor Terry Lovat, Professor Roger Markwick, Associate Professor Nancy Cushing, Dr Sara Motta, Professor Bill Mitchell, Professor Martin Watts, Professor Verity Burghmann, Associate Professor James Goodman

Scheme FEDUA Strategic Networks and Pilot Projects (SNaPP)
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2018
Funding Finish 2018
GNo
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON N

20141 grants / $90,000

Violence Studies$90,000

Funding body: University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts

Funding body University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts
Project Team Professor Philip Dwyer, Associate Professor Hans Lukas Kieser, Professor Roger Markwick, Doctor Lisa Featherstone, Doctor Michael Ondaatje, Doctor Shigeru Sato, Doctor Matthew Lewis
Scheme Research Programme 2014
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2014
Funding Finish 2016
GNo G1400927
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20131 grants / $24,122

ERF Teaching Relief - Spencer$24,122

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Doctor Liz Spencer, Professor Roger Markwick
Scheme Equity Research Fellowship
Role Lead
Funding Start 2013
Funding Finish 2013
GNo G1201021
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20121 grants / $49,365

CEF Teaching Relief - Webb$49,365

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Associate Professor Caroline Webb, Professor Roger Markwick
Scheme Career Enhancement Fellowship for Academic Women
Role Lead
Funding Start 2012
Funding Finish 2012
GNo G1101202
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20113 grants / $398,500

I was a horse and a man: Women, Stalinism and the Soviet Home Front, 1941-45 $368,500

Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)

Funding body ARC (Australian Research Council)
Project Team Professor Roger Markwick, Professor Beate Fieseler
Scheme Discovery Projects
Role Lead
Funding Start 2011
Funding Finish 2013
GNo G1000049
Type Of Funding Aust Competitive - Commonwealth
Category 1CS
UON Y

DVCR Special Grant 2011$20,000

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Professor Roger Markwick
Scheme Internal Research Support
Role Lead
Funding Start 2011
Funding Finish 2011
GNo G1101114
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

Violence, Gender and NGO Initiatives in Indonesia and Sri Lanka$10,000

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Professor Pamela Nilan, Professor Roger Markwick
Scheme Linkage Pilot Research Grant
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2011
Funding Finish 2011
GNo G1101068
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20091 grants / $575

Cultures of Violence and Conflict Conference, Brisbane, 23-27 July 2009$575

Funding body: University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts

Funding body University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts
Project Team Professor Roger Markwick
Scheme Travel Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2009
Funding Finish 2009
GNo G0190460
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20081 grants / $2,500

American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, Marriott Hotel, Philadelphia, USA, 20/11/2008 - 23/11/2008$2,500

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Professor Roger Markwick
Scheme Travel Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2008
Funding Finish 2008
GNo G0189315
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20072 grants / $21,394

Women, War and Totalitarianism : The Soviet and Nazi Experiences Compared$19,727

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Professor Roger Markwick
Scheme Near Miss Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2007
Funding Finish 2007
GNo G0187172
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

Oxford Handbook of Fascism, Reading University UK, 26-27 January 2007$1,667

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Professor Roger Markwick
Scheme Travel Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2007
Funding Finish 2007
GNo G0186896
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20061 grants / $1,421

Re-calling the Past: Collective and Individual memory of World War II in Russia and Germany, Tampere University, Finland, 1-2 December 2006$1,421

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Professor Roger Markwick
Scheme Travel Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2006
Funding Finish 2006
GNo G0186895
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20042 grants / $102,230

Women, War and the Stalinist State, 1941-45$100,000

Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)

Funding body ARC (Australian Research Council)
Project Team Professor Roger Markwick
Scheme Discovery Projects
Role Lead
Funding Start 2004
Funding Finish 2006
GNo G0182844
Type Of Funding Aust Competitive - Commonwealth
Category 1CS
UON Y

American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies 36th National Convention, 4-7 December 2004, USA$2,230

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Professor Roger Markwick
Scheme Travel Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2004
Funding Finish 2004
GNo G0184513
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20021 grants / $50,000

Soviet state and society in the Great Patriotic War, 1941-45$50,000

Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)

Funding body ARC (Australian Research Council)
Project Team Professor Roger Markwick
Scheme Discovery Projects
Role Lead
Funding Start 2002
Funding Finish 2002
GNo G0181094
Type Of Funding Aust Competitive - Commonwealth
Category 1CS
UON Y

20013 grants / $10,698

Soviet Women at War, 1941-45$7,000

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Professor Roger Markwick
Scheme New Staff Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2001
Funding Finish 2001
GNo G0181630
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

Conflict and Culture: War and Terror in the Modern Age, from 29 September 2002 to 1 October 2002$3,000

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Professor Roger Markwick
Scheme Conference Establishment Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2001
Funding Finish 2001
GNo G0181672
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

Australasian Association for European History XIIIth Biennial Conference, New Zealand 9-12 July 2001$698

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Professor Roger Markwick
Scheme Travel Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2001
Funding Finish 2001
GNo G0180937
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y
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Research Supervision

Number of supervisions

Completed6
Current2

Current Supervision

Commenced Level of Study Research Title Program Supervisor Type
2019 PhD On the Russian Origins of Lev Shestov's Critique of Reason PhD (Philosophy), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Co-Supervisor
2019 PhD Bulgaria and Europe: An Examination of the East-West Dichotomy PhD (History), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Co-Supervisor

Past Supervision

Year Level of Study Research Title Program Supervisor Type
2024 PhD The 1923 Lausanne Peace in Greek Political Thought. The Cases of Georgios Streit and Emmanouil Emmanouilidis PhD (History), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Co-Supervisor
2023 PhD Gender Forms and Gender Relations in the Senecan Corpus PhD (Classics), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Co-Supervisor
2021 PhD Australian Urban Squatters of The 1970s: Establishing and Living a Radical Lifestyle in Inner-City Sydney PhD (History), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Co-Supervisor
2019 PhD Antipodean Imperialist: Sir John Latham, a Political Biography, 1902 to 1934 PhD (History), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Principal Supervisor
2015 PhD "A Unifying Principle:" Pauli Murray, Biography, and the Quest For Identity PhD (History), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Principal Supervisor
2009 PhD Pioneer Women and Social Memory: Shifting Energies, Changing Tensions PhD (History), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle Co-Supervisor
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News

Associate Professor Roger Markwick to co-host international workshop

News • 6 Nov 2014

UON historian to co-host international workshop in Germany

On 4 and 5 December 2014, Professor Roger Markwick, Head of the School of Humanities and Social Science at the University of Newcastle (UON), will co-host a bi-lingual (English/Russian) workshop at Heinrich-Heine-Universität in Düsseldorf, Germany.

Scholars Awards Book Cover

News • 19 Aug 2013

Scholars shortlisted for awards

University of Newcastle scholars shortlisted for awards

Professor Roger Markwick

Position

Honorary Professor
School of Humanities, Creative Ind and Social Sci
College of Human and Social Futures

Focus area

History

Contact Details

Email roger.markwick@newcastle.edu.au
Mobile 0438163 724

Office

Location Callaghan
University Drive
Callaghan, NSW 2308
Australia
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