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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Samira Saramo (Migration Institute of Finland) , Ulla Savolainen (University of Helsinki, Finland)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.453kg ISBN: 9781032305257ISBN 10: 1032305258 Pages: 242 Publication Date: 21 April 2023 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews"""This rich, timely collection brings together key specialists who scrutinize varied strategies and approaches to understanding meaning-making in post- or still-repressive societies where remembrance of past repression and forced migration was long proscribed. Examining photos, memoirs, life stories, exhibitions, family memories, fiction, and commemorative practices, the contributors offer reflection on the reparative potential of excavating repressed histories and repressed memories."" Nanci Adler, Professor of Memory, History, and Transitional Justice, NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands ""Saramo and Savolainen’s volume is a timely contribution to scholarship on the memory of Soviet repression, colonialism and forced mobility, and to research on memory politics, circulation and practices of state crimes at large. The book engages theories of memory, mobilizing the affective landscape of concrete cultural objects, such as letters, photographs, memoirs, literary works, museums, etc. Finally, the volume moves towards a connective, rather than comparative, method that opens the field to a rich tapestry of shared experiences and analytical nuances."" Marta-Laura Cenedese, Postdoctoral Researcher, University of Turku, Finland/Centre Marc Bloch, Germany ""While the field of memory studies has focused considerably on the Holocaust, the memories of Stalinist repression and the Gulag remain under-researched. This timely and much-needed book is an important contribution to filling this knowledge gap. By analyzing letters, material objects and stories, the essays acknowledge the histories of the victims and demonstrate at the same time the transnational and transgenerational character of Soviet memory."" Barbara Törnquist-Plewa, Professor of Eastern and Central European Studies, Lund University, Sweden" This rich, timely collection brings together key specialists who scrutinize varied strategies and approaches to understanding meaning-making in post- or still-repressive societies where remembrance of past repression and forced migration was long proscribed. Examining photos, memoirs, life stories, exhibitions, family memories, fiction, and commemorative practices, the contributors offer reflection on the reparative potential of excavating repressed histories and repressed memories. Nanci Adler, Professor of Memory, History, and Transitional Justice, NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands Saramo and Savolainen's volume is a timely contribution to scholarship on the memory of Soviet repression, colonialism and forced mobility, and to research on memory politics, circulation and practices of state crimes at large. The book engages theories of memory, mobilizing the affective landscape of concrete cultural objects, such as letters, photographs, memoirs, literary works, museums, etc. Finally, the volume moves towards a connective, rather than comparative, method that opens the field to a rich tapestry of shared experiences and analytical nuances. Marta-Laura Cenedese, Postdoctoral Researcher, University of Turku, Estonia/Centre Marc Bloch, Germany While the field of memory studies has focused considerably on the Holocaust, the memories of Stalinist repression and the Gulag remain under-researched. This timely and much-needed book is an important contribution to filling this knowledge gap. By analyzing letters, material objects and stories, the essays acknowledge the histories of the victims and demonstrate at the same time the transnational and transgenerational character of Soviet memory. Barbara Toernquist-Plewa, Professor of Eastern and Central European Studies, Lund University, Sweden Author Information"Samira Saramo is Kone Foundation Senior Researcher at the Migration Institute of Finland. Saramo is a transdisciplinary historian researching Finnish mobilities through the lenses of life writing, emotions, community, place, and the everyday. She is the author of Building That Bright Future: Soviet Karelia in the Life Writing of Finnish North Americans (2022). Saramo’s research has been published in Journal of Social History, Qualitative Research, European Journal of Life Writing, Comparative American Studies, European Journal of American Studies and elsewhere. She is the Chair and Founder of the History of Finnish Migrations Network and Vice Chair of the Finnish Oral History Network. Ulla Savolainen is University Researcher at the University of Helsinki, Department of Cultures. She is a folklorist specializing in memory studies, oral history, and narrative research. Her research interests include poetics and politics of remembrance, transnationality, and materiality. She is the leader of the research projects ""Transnational Memory Cultures of Ingrian Finns"" (2020–2022) and ""Toward an ecology of memory. Mediums, modalities, and agents of the construction of Ingrian Finnish pasts"" (2022–2025). Savolainen’s doctoral dissertation (2015) focused on the life writings of former Karelian child evacuees in Finland. She has also researched oral histories of internments of German and Hungarian citizens in Finland in 1944–1946 and analyzed reception of compensation for past injustice." Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |