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Guardians of Living History

An Ethnography of Post-Soviet Memory Making in Estonia
  • Inge Melchior
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2020
View more publications by Amsterdam University Press
Heritage and Memory Studies
This book is in the series

About this book

This book interrogates how people engage with their violent past, both within their families and as members of a national community, when living in an extremely complicated society with a short history of independence and a desire to belong to Europe.

Author / Editor information

Melchior Inge :

Dr Inge Melchior defended her PhD thesis in the Social and Cultural Anthropology department of the VU University Amsterdam in 2015. She has published on her ethnographic fieldwork in Estonia as well as on her later applied research experience. She currently works at Maastricht University.

Reviews

"Guardians of Living History is an enriching contribution to the existing research on memory studies and national identity. [...] [It] is a brilliant introduction for readers interested in the former Eastern Bloc and its memory cultures, in Estonia as well as other countries with similar transitions from communist regimes to competing discourses on memory and representation. [...] Additionally, Melchior’s multi-disciplinary approach that combines anthropological and historical methods will undoubtedly serve as inspiration for academics from various fields. As the former Soviet republics continue to scrutinize the Russian Federation’s political interest in its own perceived backyard, this study will undoubtedly retain its relevance for a time to come."
- Douglas Ong, Department of History, Greifswald University, H-Soz-Kult 12.11 (2021)

"Guardians of Living History is a well-written and carefully-argued study of memory making and memory activism in Estonia from the 1980s through the mid-2010s ... [It is] a welcome addition to our understanding not only of how vital memories of World War II are for a country incorporated later into the Soviet Union, but also of how those memories shaped political and social developments following independence. Students of Eastern Europe will benefit from its keen insights."
- Steven T. Duke, The Russian Review, Vol. 79, No. 4 (2020)


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Part 1. The Making of Estonian History

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Part 2. The Meaning of Closure

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Part 3. Closure and a Significant Other

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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
January 7, 2020
eBook ISBN:
9789048541430
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
368
Illustrations:
9
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