Ratas y resentimiento: la desmovilización del Ejército Rojo en Leningrado durante la posguerra, 1945-1950

Authors

  • Robert Dale Nottingham Trent University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53351/ruhm.v3i6.73

Keywords:

desmovilización, Leningrado, mito, Unión Soviética, excombatientes

Abstract

Translated by Ángel Alcalde Fernández and Claudio Hernández Burgos

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Author Biography

Robert Dale, Nottingham Trent University

Dr Robert Dale completed a BA degree in History from the University of York in 2002. After receiving an MA in History from the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University College London, in 2004, he spent a year improving his Russian at the Centre for Russian Language and Culture at Saint Petersburg State University. In 2006, Dr Robert Dale began a PhD at Queen Mary, University of London, exploring the demobilisation of Red Army veterans in Leningrad after 1945. Thanks to funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, he was able to spend the entire 2007/2008 academic year researching in archives and libraries in Saint Petersburg and Moscow. In 2009/2010, he held a prestigious Harry Frank Guggenheim Dissertation Fellowship enabling him to complete his doctorate, which was awarded at the beginning of 2011.

Dr Dale was awarded the 2010 George L. Mosse Prize by the Journal of Contemporary History for his first published article, which was based on his doctoral research.

Dr Dale has previously held Teaching Fellowships at Newcastle University (2010/2011) in Russian History and the University of York (2011/12) in Modern European History. In September 2012, he was awarded a three year British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship, the first two years of which were completed in the History Department at King’s College London. He joined Nottingham Trent University in September 2014.

Published

2015-10-11

How to Cite

Dale, R. (2015). Ratas y resentimiento: la desmovilización del Ejército Rojo en Leningrado durante la posguerra, 1945-1950. Revista Universitaria De Historia Militar, 3(6), 219–238. https://doi.org/10.53351/ruhm.v3i6.73