The Holodomor, one of the major tragedies of the twentieth century, became the subject of serious study only since the fall of the USSR. In this course you will explore recent research through the prisms of colonialism, empire, genocide, famine and food security, (dis)information dissemination, and Ukrainian-Russian relations.

Famine as Genocide: The Holodomor in Ukraine
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Recommended experience
Recommended experience
Beginner level
Famine as Genocide in the 20th Century: The Case of the Holodomor is for anyone who wants to learn.
Recommended experience
Recommended experience
Beginner level
Famine as Genocide in the 20th Century: The Case of the Holodomor is for anyone who wants to learn.
What you'll learn
Gain knowledge of the impact of the Holodomor in Ukrainian, Soviet and world history
Be able to place the Holodomor in the broader context of Genocide Studies
Reflect on the relevance of the Holodomor to the current political developments in the region and the Russian war on Ukraine
Details to know
March 2026
51 assignments
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There are 14 modules in this course
Welcome to the course! This introductory module provides context that will be helpful in subsequent modules, particularly information on Ukrainian geography and history. This module also summarizes the topics addressed in each of the following course modules. Content Warning: This course contains descriptions of death and graphic imagery of human remains.
What's included
14 videos2 readings2 assignments
14 videos• Total 35 minutes
- Introduction to the Holodomor• 3 minutes
- Ukraine: A Nation of Diverse Identity• 2 minutes
- Redefining Perspectives on History and Identity• 2 minutes
- Cossacks and Empires: Shaping Ukraine's Historical Landscape• 3 minutes
- The Making of Modern Ukraine• 6 minutes
- Various Visions of the Holodomor• 2 minutes
- Challenges in Studying the Holodomor• 2 minutes
- The Holodomor in Context: Comparing Famine• 1 minute
- Soviet History and the Road to the Holodomor• 4 minutes
- The Intensification of Famine: From Collectivization to the Holodomor• 3 minutes
- From Surviving to Remembering: The Human Experience of the Holodomor• 2 minutes
- Awareness, Denial, and the Question of Genocide• 2 minutes
- Understanding and Remembering the Holodomor• 2 minutes
- Conclusion• 1 minute
2 readings
- Additional Readings and Resources• 0 minutes
- Acknowledgements and Citations• 0 minutes
2 assignments• Total 10 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 5 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 5 minutes
Some of the largest famines ever recorded, including the Holodomor, occurred in the 20th century, an age of unparalleled food abundance. This module examines how modern famine shifted from natural to man-made causes. Content Warning: This course contains descriptions of death and graphic imagery of human remains.
What's included
14 videos2 readings7 assignments
14 videos• Total 40 minutes
- Introduction• 2 minutes
- The Population Explosion• 3 minutes
- What Changed• 2 minutes
- Ukraine and the Global Food Market• 5 minutes
- The Modernization of Famine• 3 minutes
- Food Crises vs. Famine• 4 minutes
- Famine and Food Access• 6 minutes
- Land of Milk and Honey• 3 minutes
- Land of Poverty and Famine• 2 minutes
- The Diversity of the Russian Empire• 3 minutes
- The Famine of 1891-92• 2 minutes
- Famine in Ukraine• 3 minutes
- Man-Made Famine in Ukraine• 2 minutes
- Conclusion• 1 minute
2 readings
- Additional Readings and Resources• 0 minutes
- Acknowledgements and Citations• 0 minutes
7 assignments• Total 160 minutes
- Reflection• 5 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 5 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
This module is the first of two examining the broader historical context of the Holodomor. It explores the Bolshevik Party’s struggle to establish control over the former Russian Empire between 1917 and 1922 and considers how the legacy of revolution, war, mass violence, and economic collapse shaped the formation of the Soviet state. Content Warning: This course contains descriptions of death and graphic imagery of human remains.
What's included
15 videos2 readings2 assignments
15 videos• Total 33 minutes
- Introduction• 2 minutes
- A Series of Cataclysmic Events• 3 minutes
- Lenin and the Bolshevik Party• 1 minute
- The October Revolution• 3 minutes
- Who Were the Bolsheviks• 1 minute
- Marxism• 2 minutes
- What is to be Done?• 2 minutes
- From Revolution to Civil War• 2 minutes
- The Bolsheviks and the Peasantry• 3 minutes
- War Communism• 2 minutes
- Peasant Rebellion• 2 minutes
- Revolution in the Borderlands• 5 minutes
- The Famine of 1921-22 and Famine Relief• 2 minutes
- The Legacy of the War and Revolution• 2 minutes
- Conclusion• 1 minute
2 readings
- Additional Readings and Resources• 0 minutes
- Acknowledgements and Citations• 0 minutes
2 assignments• Total 60 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
This module examines how the Soviet state and economy were transformed in the 1920s and how Stalin’s radical program of industrialization and collectivization, introduced in 1928, set the stage for famine. Content Warning: This course contains descriptions of death and graphic imagery of human remains.
What's included
16 videos2 readings2 assignments
16 videos• Total 35 minutes
- Introduction• 2 minutes
- The New Economic Policy• 2 minutes
- The Formation of the Soviet Union• 3 minutes
- Indigenization (Korenizatsiia)• 2 minutes
- Stalin's Rise to Power• 4 minutes
- The First Five-Year Plan• 1 minute
- Why 1928• 2 minutes
- Stalin and the Kulaks• 2 minutes
- The Peasants and Industrialization• 2 minutes
- Stalin, the Peasantry, and the Nationality Question• 2 minutes
- Collectivization• 2 minutes
- Dekulakization• 2 minutes
- Peasant Resistance• 4 minutes
- Collectivization Fulfilled• 1 minute
- The Kazakh Famine• 5 minutes
- Conclusion• 1 minute
2 readings
- Additional Readings and Resources• 0 minutes
- Acknowledgements and Citations• 0 minutes
2 assignments• Total 60 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
Recent research has revealed significant differences in famine mortality across the Soviet Union. This module is the first of two that explore what made the Holodomor in Soviet Ukraine different from famine elsewhere. It examines how and why Ukraine and Ukrainians were targeted. Content Warning: This course contains descriptions of death and graphic imagery of human remains.
What's included
11 videos2 readings3 assignments
11 videos• Total 36 minutes
- Introduction• 1 minute
- What the Numbers Tell Us• 5 minutes
- Famine within the Famine• 4 minutes
- The Problematic Republic• 2 minutes
- The Central Rada• 3 minutes
- Ukrainian Peasant• 5 minutes
- The Creation of the USSR• 1 minute
- The Policy of Indigenization• 5 minutes
- Soviet Ukraine as a Model• 2 minutes
- The Shumsky Affair• 5 minutes
- Conclusion• 2 minutes
2 readings
- Additional Readings and Resources• 0 minutes
- Acknowledgements and Citations• 0 minutes
3 assignments• Total 90 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
- Reflection Question• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
This module examines specific policies and measures introduced in Soviet Ukraine in the winter of 1932-33 that willfully intensified the famine. It looks at how the Soviet grain procurement drive evolved into a larger campaign waged by Stalin and the Kremlin leadership for political control over Ukraine. Content Warning: This course contains descriptions of death and graphic imagery of human remains.
What's included
15 videos2 readings2 assignments
15 videos• Total 38 minutes
- Introduction• 1 minute
- The First Five Year Plan• 2 minutes
- The Socialist Offensive in the Ukrainian Countryside• 5 minutes
- Resistance to Collectivization• 5 minutes
- From Model Republic to Hotbed of Conspiracy• 3 minutes
- Who were the Petliurites?• 2 minutes
- Taking Grain out of Ukraine• 2 minutes
- Blame the Kulaks, Blame Ukrainian Communists• 1 minute
- Hunger Riots and Migration• 2 minutes
- From Famine to Holodomor• 1 minute
- The Battle over the 1932 Procurement Plan• 3 minutes
- The Crushing Blow• 4 minutes
- The Terror-Famine• 4 minutes
- Relief• 1 minute
- Conclusion• 2 minutes
2 readings
- Additional Readings and Resources• 0 minutes
- Acknowledgements and Citations• 0 minutes
2 assignments• Total 60 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
What was starvation like for those who experienced it? What were the ways people tried to save themselves and their families? This is the first of two modules that draw on survivor and witness testimonies to address the experience of the Holodomor “from below.” Content Warning: This course contains descriptions of death and graphic imagery of human remains.
What's included
18 videos2 readings3 assignments
18 videos• Total 37 minutes
- Introduction • 1 minute
- Biological Effects of Starvation• 1 minute
- Universal Symptoms of Famine• 2 minutes
- Starvation and Infectious Disease• 2 minutes
- Starvation and the Mind• 1 minute
- The Process of Starvation • 1 minute
- Who Lived? Who Died?• 1 minute
- The Elderly• 3 minutes
- Children and Famine• 3 minutes
- Mortality by Gender• 2 minutes
- The Suffering of Survivors• 2 minutes
- Surviving Famine: An Introduction• 1 minute
- Surviving Famine: The Holodomor• 1 minute
- Survival Strategies: Hiding Grain• 3 minutes
- Survival Strategies: Saved by the Cow• 2 minutes
- Survival Strategies: "Famine Foods"• 3 minutes
- Survival Strategies: Hunting and Foraging• 5 minutes
- Conclusion• 1 minute
2 readings
- Additional Readings and Resources• 0 minutes
- Acknowledgements and Citations• 0 minutes
3 assignments• Total 90 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
This module explores additional survival strategies adopted by the rural population during the Holodomor and analyzes how the authorities used food and a rationing system to reward or punish specific groups within Soviet society. Content Warning: This course contains descriptions of death and graphic imagery of human remains.
What's included
14 videos2 readings4 assignments
14 videos• Total 39 minutes
- Introduction• 1 minute
- Selling Possessions• 5 minutes
- TORGSINs• 3 minutes
- Distress Sales• 3 minutes
- Famine and Industrialization• 1 minute
- Theft and Crime• 3 minutes
- Cannibalism• 2 minutes
- Sexual Barter and Sexual Violence• 4 minutes
- Migration During the Holodomor• 4 minutes
- Internal Migration• 3 minutes
- Did Migration Work?• 2 minutes
- Privileged Groups• 2 minutes
- Food and Famine in the City• 5 minutes
- Conclusion• 1 minute
2 readings
- Additional Readings and Resources• 0 minutes
- Acknowledgements and Citations• 0 minutes
4 assignments• Total 120 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
Ukraine in the 1920s experienced a cultural renaissance after centuries of Russian imperial oppression. This module examines the transformation of Ukrainian education and urban life and the remarkable achievements in Ukrainian literature, visual arts, theater, and film that were cut short by the Stalinist regime’s suppression of Ukrainian culture and cultural elites ─ part of the multi-pronged attack on Ukraine in the late 1920-early 1930s. Content Warning: This course contains descriptions of death and graphic imagery of human remains.
What's included
17 videos2 readings6 assignments
17 videos• Total 42 minutes
- Introduction• 1 minute
- Imperial Suppression of Ukrainian Culture• 1 minute
- Rural Versus Urban• 2 minutes
- Ukrainianization• 2 minutes
- Migration to the Cities• 3 minutes
- The Transformation of Education• 1 minute
- Building a New Ukrainian Culture• 2 minutes
- New Literary Horizons in Ukraine• 3 minutes
- VAPLITE and VUSPP• 3 minutes
- Visual Art in the 1920s• 3 minutes
- Graphic Design and the Performing Arts• 3 minutes
- Cinema Flourishes• 3 minutes
- The Trial of the Union for the Liberation of Ukraine• 3 minutes
- The End of the Renaissance• 2 minutes
- Mass Executions and Lost Manuscripts• 5 minutes
- The Destruction of Religious and Rural Life• 2 minutes
- Conclusion• 1 minute
2 readings
- Additional Readings and Resources• 0 minutes
- Acknowledgements and Citations• 0 minutes
6 assignments• Total 180 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
What did the international community know about the Holodomor during the early 1930s? Far from being a "hidden famine," awareness was widespread, even among those who publicly denied it was happening. By looking at the efforts of media, governments, and private organizations to cover ─ and cover up ─ the tragedy, this module provides insight into contemporary discussions about misinformation, propaganda, and mass atrocity. Content Warning: This course contains descriptions of death and graphic imagery of human remains.
What's included
16 videos2 readings3 assignments
16 videos• Total 37 minutes
- Introduction• 1 minute
- The 'Hidden' Famine• 4 minutes
- Foreign Journalists• 2 minutes
- Why Deny?• 2 minutes
- The Truth Tellers• 5 minutes
- The British Government• 1 minute
- The US Government• 1 minute
- Other Governments• 2 minutes
- The Comintern• 1 minute
- The Communist Party of the US• 2 minutes
- The Jewish Daily Forward (Forvets)• 1 minute
- Denying the Famine• 2 minutes
- Beyond the New York Times: How News of the Famine Got Out in 1933• 5 minutes
- Ukrainians and the International Relief Campaign, 1933 • 4 minutes
- The Failed Campaign: The League of Nations and Roosevelt Administration• 3 minutes
- Conclusion• 2 minutes
2 readings
- Additional Readings and Resources• 0 minutes
- Acknowledgements and Citations• 0 minutes
3 assignments• Total 90 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
This module looks at the origins of the concept of genocide, its definition under international law, and how public understanding of genocide has changed from its legal definition in 1948. The module also presents common misperceptions and key debates about genocide and provides an overview of the dynamics of the Ukrainian Holodomor within comparative genocide studies frameworks. Content Warning: This course contains descriptions of death and graphic imagery of human remains.
What's included
13 videos7 readings6 assignments
13 videos• Total 36 minutes
- Introduction• 2 minutes
- Crime of Crimes• 2 minutes
- Group Destruction• 1 minute
- The Origins of the Term "Genocide"• 4 minutes
- Codifying the Term "Genocide" in International Law Pt 1• 2 minutes
- Codifying the Term "Genocide" in International Law Pt 2• 2 minutes
- Common Misperceptions Pt 1• 6 minutes
- Common Misperceptions Pt 2• 3 minutes
- Disagreements and Agreements• 3 minutes
- Dehumanization• 3 minutes
- Intention and Action - Mens Rea and Actus Reus• 2 minutes
- The Holodomor as Genocide• 3 minutes
- Conclusion• 3 minutes
7 readings• Total 50 minutes
- Catastrophic personal impact of genocide on survivors• 10 minutes
- Reading• 10 minutes
- Reading• 10 minutes
- Reading• 10 minutes
- Reading• 10 minutes
- Additional Readings and Resources• 0 minutes
- Acknowledgements and Citations• 0 minutes
6 assignments• Total 180 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
In this module, we explore the short- and long-term impacts of the Holodomor, not only for Ukraine but for the USSR and beyond. Although the famine had largely ended by the fall of 1933, its consequences continued to affect the physical and mental health of survivors and had long-term impacts on social relations and society, as well as on agriculture and the environment. Content Warning: This course contains descriptions of death and graphic imagery of human remains.
What's included
15 videos2 readings6 assignments
15 videos• Total 32 minutes
- Introduction• 1 minute
- How the Famine Came to an End• 2 minutes
- The Famine as a Slow Conclusion• 2 minutes
- Broken Resistance• 1 minute
- Worker Shortages• 2 minutes
- A Way of Life Destroyed• 2 minutes
- The Famine and Urban Centers in Ukraine• 3 minutes
- As Though it Never Happened and Breaking the Famine Taboo• 6 minutes
- The Holodomor as a Prequel to the Terror and Repression of the Late 1930s• 2 minutes
- Long-Term Agricultural and Political Effects of the Holodomor• 1 minute
- Effect on Soviet Leadership• 2 minutes
- The Demographic Collapse and its Consequences• 3 minutes
- Intergenerational Transmission of Trauma• 2 minutes
- Epigenetics and the Physical Scars of the Holodomor• 1 minute
- Conclusion• 2 minutes
2 readings
- Additional Readings and Resources• 0 minutes
- Acknowledgements and Citations• 0 minutes
6 assignments• Total 180 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
How was the memory of the Holodomor shared and passed on? In this module we look at the concept of collective memory, used by anthropologists, sociologists, historians, and psychologists. This module provides an overview of the dynamics of collective memory; the social, cultural, and political contexts of transnational memory formation; and the complex processes of collective Holodomor memory formation in and outside of Ukraine. Content Warning: This course contains descriptions of death and graphic imagery of human remains.
What's included
14 videos2 readings5 assignments
14 videos• Total 36 minutes
- Introduction• 2 minutes
- What is Collective Memory• 3 minutes
- Remembering Extreme Violence• 4 minutes
- The Challenges of Famine Memorialization• 2 minutes
- Silence Overcome• 1 minute
- What About the Holodomor?• 3 minutes
- Community Responses to the Famine• 4 minutes
- Postwar Years• 3 minutes
- Testimonials of Grief and Loss• 4 minutes
- Monuments• 3 minutes
- Political Responses to the Holodomor• 6 minutes
- Contributions to the Shaping of Memory• 1 minute
- Intergenerational Transmission of Trauma• 1 minute
- Conclusion• 1 minute
2 readings
- Additional Readings and Resources• 0 minutes
- Acknowledgements and Citations• 0 minutes
5 assignments• Total 150 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
- Reflection• 30 minutes
- Final Knowledge Check• 30 minutes
A summary of topics covered in the 13 modules of this course. Content Warning: This course contains descriptions of death and graphic imagery of human remains.
What's included
1 video1 reading
1 video• Total 7 minutes
- Conclusion• 7 minutes
1 reading
- Acknowledgements and Citations• 0 minutes
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