“[The book’s] considerable value as a contribution to Soviet and post‐Soviet memory studies is undeniable. Bogumił’s work should become a must‐read for everyone who works in the field of the memory of political repressions.” • Soviet & Post-Soviet Politics & Society“Bogumił’s work is a welcome contribution to our understanding that there are in fact several Russias standing eyeball to eyeball, and several memories of Russia’s Stalinist past. Bogumił reminds us that the memory of the Holocaust was shaped over generations, so we may have to analyze this phenomenon in Russia in the longer run. For now, it is clear that the short-term remedy to circumvent any obligation to fully confront the meaning of the Gulag is to remember a brighter past or place the memory of Stalinism in the state’s hands.” • American Historical Review“…a rich, provocative study that will generate much discussion in post-Soviet memory studies.” • The Russian Review“ Bogumił’s book is an important development in prison camp anthropology – for, although there are quite a few books and articles dedicated to particular former Gulag sites and their post-Stalin and post-Soviet history, this is the first book to take a systemic (and well researched) approach to the memorialisation of the Gulag.” • Australian Slavonic and East European Studies“This is a captivating interdisciplinary book that analyzes the complex reawakening history of Gulag memory in the Russian Federation. It is key to all those interested in understanding the complexity of memory formation, and its political, social, and cultural nature.” • Eurasian Geography and Economics“Bogumił’s contribution to the field sheds light on the ways in which the Gulag is understood and represented in Rus¬sia’s often-neglected regions.” • Ab Imperio“Zuzanna Bogumil’s thoroughly and well-researched book represents a major contribution to the field of her study and cannot be ignored by any serious scholar who is interested in sites of memory of communist terror in the post-Soviet world and in this memory in general.” • Baltic Worlds