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Remembering Karelia

Autor Karen Armstrong
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 31 ian 2004
The war years, the loss of territory, the resettlement of the Karelian population, and the reparations paid to the Allied Forces, were experiences shared by most people living in Finland between 1939 and the late 1950s. Using a family's memoirs, the author shows how these traumatic events affected people; how they coped physically and emotionally.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781571816504
ISBN-10: 157181650X
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 11 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Editura: BERGHAHN BOOKS INC

Notă biografică

Karen Armstrong is Professor of Social Anthropology at Helsinki University. Her research focuses on politics, social and cultural transformation, kinship, personal narratives and gender. She has conducted fieldwork in Scotland and Finland and is currently the editor of Suomen Antropologi, The Finnish Journal of Anthropology.

Cuprins

1. Event and Meaning: Inkila, 1997/ Community Discourse /The Historical Context 2. Subjective Meaning: Routines and Rituals/ The Lutheran Church in Kirvu/ Residual Structures 3. Significant Worlds: Topogeny/ The Text as a World 4. Genealogical Narratives: Marriage and Alliance/ Origins/ A House Called Poja-Aatam/ The Central Story: Eskola House/ Karelian House Society 5. Kinship and Nation: Getting Married/ Inheritance/ Exchange and Transmission 6. Wartime: A National Event: Individual Voices and Collective Memory/ The Civil War and Its Aftermath/ Sivistys/ Women and Sacrifice in War/ Extraordinary Noted/ Narratives and National Events/ Kollaa: Turunen's Story/ Toivo Kempas: a Finnish man/ Patriotism 7. Mamma hyva: Meaning and Value in Letters: Apples and Sugar/ Living Properly/ Rhubarb and Cultural Transmission 8. Towards Mythology: The First Evacuation/ Experiencing Otherness/ Back Home in Inkila/ The Second Evacuation/ End of War, 1944/ Boundaries 9. Conclusion: National Political Culture