Michaela Pohl

Associate Professor of History
Office: Swift Hall, room 24
Phone: (845) 437-5669
Hours: Leave of absence, a and b semesters
Pohl is completing a manuscript on the history of Astana, the new capital of Kazakhstan. It focuses on destalinization and the interaction of various ethnic groups during the Virgin Lands campaign, a settlement drive that started under Nikita Khrushchev. Among her recent publications are "Anna Politkovskaya and Ramzan Kadyrov: Exposing the Kadyrov Syndrome," in Problems of Post-Communism, Vol. 54, No. 5, September-October 2007, pp. 30-39; "The 'Planet of 100 Languages': Ethnic Relations and Soviet Identity in the Virgin Lands," in Nicholas Breyfogle, Abby Schrader, and Willard Sunderland, eds., Peopling the Russian Periphery: Borderland Colonization in Eurasian History (London and New York, 2007); and "Women and Girls in the Virgin Lands," in Melanie Iliç, Susan E. Reid, and Lynne Attwood, Women in the Khrushchev Era (Basingstoke and New York, 2004), pp. 52 -74.