Launched in 1994, the Mohyla Lectures is a major academic event in Ukrainian Studies at the University of Saskatchewan. This series is devoted to discussions on the topics of Ukrainian heritage and contemporary Ukrainian and Ukrainian-Canadian affairs. Select lectures delivered in the series were printed by Heritage Press, the publishing arm of the Prairie Centre for the Study of Ukrainian Heritage.
The Chornobyl Event: Ecology, Media, and the Anthropocene The Origins and Consequences of the Donbas War One Hundred Years of Modern Ukrainian Statehood What’s Changed: Evolution of Ukraine’s Media since Independence Ukrainian Nationalism 1929-1956: Academic Judgements and Popular Perceptions Between Ukrainian Diasporas in Germany: Reflections on Teaching Modern Ukrainian History Holodomor: Conceptualization of the Ukrainian Genocide From Building to Burning: The Legacy of Ukrainian Churches on the Rural Prairies Fasten Your Seatbelt: A Lecture Performed by Natalka Husar Immigrant and Symbolic Ethnicity in Ukrainian-Brazilian Culture Causes of the Famine-Holodomor in Ukraine, 1932-33 Divergent Memories: Ukrainians, Jews, and the Holocaust An Apology Overdue: Ukrainian-Canadian Redress Ukraine’s Quest for Europe: A Historian’s Perspective Innovations in Ukrainian Canadian Community Development: An Institutional Response Dr. Janice Kulyk-Keefer (2004) Dark Ghost in the Corner: Imagining Ukrainian-Canadian Identity Dr. Oleh Wolowyna (2001) Religion and Ethnicity in Canada: Historical Trends and Current Situation Dr. Dmytro Cipywnyk (2000) Saskatchewan-Ukraine Relations Since Independence Myrna Kostash (1999) All of Baba’s Great-Grandchildren: Ethnic Identity in the Next Canada Rev. Dr. Myroslaw Tataryn (1996) Christian Churches in the New Ukraine Mykhailo Hrushevsky: Historian and National Awakener Dr. Zenon Kohut (1995) History as Battleground: Ukrainian-Russian Relations and Historical Consciousness in Contemporary Ukraine |