It took nearly 100 years to rediscover our cultural heritage of the beginning of the 20th century.
We are now getting acquainted with our past and see it more clearly than in Soviet times.
Formally, the phenomenon of cultural regeneration in the 1920s‑1930s, ignited by repressions,
was given its name by Yurii Lavrinenko, a Ukrainian émigré literary critic, in his anthology of the
literature of the 1920s‑1930s, entitled “The Executed Renaissance” (Rozstriliane vidrodzhennia).