The Executed Renaissance: how Moscow killed a culture

Interwar period UkraineRussia 18/06/2026 3 min read

The renaissance of the 1920s

The 1920s in Ukraine were a time of powerful cultural upsurge. Mykola Khvylovy was, in the assessment of historian Lyudmyla Turchyna, one of the leaders — if not the chief leader — of the Ukrainian renaissance of that era[1]. Around him and figures such as the Neoclassicists (Mykola Zerov), literary debates raged and a modern Ukrainian literature took shape.

How Moscow curtailed freedom

This upsurge unfolded under Soviet rule — and the authorities suppressed it. Khvylovy was sent abroad in 1928, his position was examined at the plenums of the Central Committee of the CP(b)U, and People’s Commissar of Education Mykola Skrypnyk gave “Khvylovism” a class-based, stigmatizing definition — supposedly the “ideological foundation of the kulak”[2]. Free literary debate was gradually curtailed in favor of the single permitted template — socialist realism. This was not chance but policy.

The suicide of 1933

The denouement coincided with the Holodomor. In his final years Khvylovy was permitted to travel to the villages to record the consequences of the famine; according to one account, in one of those villages he saw the corpse of his own father[3]. In 1933 Khvylovy took his own life — an act of despair against the backdrop of both the extermination of the peasantry by famine and the destruction of Ukrainian culture.

The Executed Renaissance

Khvylovy’s fate was not an exception but a symbol. An entire generation of the Ukrainian creative and scholarly elite of the 1920s was destroyed in the 1930s. The phenomenon was named the “Executed Renaissance” by the eponymous anthology of Yurii Lavrinenko (1959). Its preface states plainly: these works were banned and destroyed as a result of Moscow’s new policy of suppressing and colonizing Ukraine after 1933.

What this means

The “Executed Renaissance” is a direct refutation of the myth of a Soviet “flourishing” of Ukrainian culture. In reality, the 1920s produced a surge, and the 1930s a systematic extermination of its bearers. It is the same imperial logic as the Holodomor: to physically destroy not only the peasantry but also the intellectual elite capable of keeping the nation separate. The culture that could not be subjugated was erased — but not entirely: it is precisely thanks to people like Khvylovy that we know what was destroyed.

Related persons

  • Lyudmyla Turchyna — Candidate of Historical Sciences, researcher of the era of the Executed Renaissance

References

  1. [1] summary
    Микола Хвильовий — один із лідерів, якщо не головний лідер, українського культурного відродження 1920-х років.
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  2. [2] summary
    Радянська влада придушувала цей рух: Хвильового відправили за кордон 1928 року, його позицію розглядали на пленумах ЦК КП(б)У, а нарком освіти Микола Скрипник дав «хвильовізму» класове визначення — нібито це ідеологічне підґрунтя «куркуля». Вільну літературну дискусію згортали на користь шаблону соцреалізму.
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  3. [3] summary
    Хвильовий — учасник «розстріляного відродження». В останні роки йому дозволяли виїжджати в села, щоб фіксувати наслідки Голодомору; за одним із припущень, в одному із сіл він побачив труп власного рідного батька. 1933 року Хвильовий наклав на себе руки.
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Sources

  1. book Юрій Лавріненко (1959) Розстріляне відродження: Антологія 1917–1933 — Instytut Literacki, Paris — Munich The anthology that gave the phenomenon its name (Paris–Munich, 1959). According to Lavrinenko's preface, it included works published in the Ukrainian SSR in 1917–1933 and later banned and destroyed as a result of Moscow's new policy of suppressing and colonizing Ukraine after 1933.