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Postal Censorship, Surveillance, Resistance
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15 September 2026

Throughout twentieth-century Ukraine, letters were lifelines. Under two of history’s most repressive regimes – the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany – Ukrainians wrote to sustain family ties, affirm identity, and resist erasure, even as every word passed through the machinery of surveillance and censorship.
Drawing on newly uncovered archival materials, including documents from the Ukrainian Archives of the former KGB, this groundbreaking work is the first comprehensive study of censorship and epistolary culture in Ukraine under totalitarian rule. Postal Censorship, Surveillance, Resistance reveals how correspondence functioned as an emotional artifact, a political instrument, and a historical document, showing how the act of writing could be both deeply personal and profoundly political. The volume adopts an interdisciplinary framework to examine how systems of control shaped the practices of letter-writers – from Ostarbeiters and Gulag prisoners to diaspora families, Jews, former communists, émigrés, and Mennonites – who devised strategies of resilience through metaphor, folklore, and coded language. Ten key instructional documents of the Soviet secret services, spanning 1940 to 1990, are presented in an appendix, giving readers direct insight into the rules and mechanisms of surveillance.
Bridging history, anthropology, literary studies, and memory studies, and grounded in rich primary sources, Postal Censorship, Surveillance, Resistance positions Ukraine as a crucial site of postal repression and subversive ingenuity, highlighting the persistence of human creativity in the face of silencing.
Alex Averbuch (Editor)
Alex Averbuch is assistant professor of Ukrainian literature and culture at the University of Michigan.
Natalia Khanenko-Friesen (Editor)
Natalia Khanenko-Friesen is director of the Canadian Institute for Ukrainian Studies and professor of modern languages and cultural studies at the University of Alberta.
Jelena Pogosjan (Editor)
Jelena Pogosjan is professor of modern languages and cultural studies at the University of Alberta.