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OverviewUkrainian Otherlands is an innovative exploration of modern ethnic identity, focused on diaspora/homeland understandings of each other in Ukraine and in Ukrainian ethnic communities around the globe. Exploring a rich array of folk songs, poetry and stories, trans-Atlantic correspondence, family histories, and rituals of homecoming and hosting that developed in the Ukrainian diaspora and Ukraine during the twentieth century, Natalia Khanenko-Friesen asserts that many important aspects of modern ethnic identity form, develop, and reveal themselves not only through the diaspora’s continued yearning for the homeland, but also in a homeland’s deeply felt connection to its diaspora. Yet, she finds each group imagines the “otherland” and ethnic identity differently, leading to misunderstandings between Ukrainians and their ethnic-Ukrainian “brothers and sisters” abroad. An innovative exploration of the persistence of vernacular culture in the modern world, Ukrainian Otherlands, amply informed by theory and fieldwork, will appeal to those interested in folklore, ethnic and diaspora studies, modernity, migration, folk psychology, history, and cultural anthropology. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Natalia Khanenko-FriesenPublisher: University of Wisconsin Press Imprint: University of Wisconsin Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 22.80cm Weight: 0.380kg ISBN: 9780299303440ISBN 10: 0299303446 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 30 July 2015 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsThe author takes her readers on a profound journey through time and across geographic borders. In clear, engaging language, she finds a balance between culturally rich ethnographic examples and complex theoretical interpretations, introducing a folkloric perspective that is largely underrepresented in diaspora studies. Mariya Lesiv, Memorial University of Newfoundland The author takes her readers on a profound journey through time and across geographic borders. In clear, engaging language, she finds a balance between culturally rich ethnographic examples and complex theoretical interpretations, introducing a folkloric perspective that is largely underrepresented in diaspora studies. --Mariya Lesiv, Memorial University of Newfoundland Vernacular culture, migration, and feelings of longing to belong are explored in this multisited ethnography of the connections among diasporic ethnic Ukrainian communities. . . . In an ambitious stroke, [the author] extended her research from the postwar outmigration period, when most Ukrainians went to North America, to include interviews with Ukrainians who migrated to Portugal and Italy for work after the collapse of the USSR. <i>Russian Review</i> Khanenko-Friesen takes her readers on a profound journey through time and across geographic borders. In clear, engaging language, she finds a balance between culturally rich ethnographic examples and complex theoretical interpretations, introducing a folkloric perspective that is largely underrepresented in diaspora studies. --Mariya Lesiv, Memorial University of Newfoundland A fine treatment of the complexities of immigration and vernacular means of coping with the accompanying displacement. --Journal of American Folklore Vernacular culture, migration, and feelings of longing to belong are explored in this multisited ethnography of the connections among diasporic ethnic Ukrainian communities. . . . In an ambitious stroke, [the author] extended her research from the postwar outmigration period, when most Ukrainians went to North America, to include interviews with Ukrainians who migrated to Portugal and Italy for work after the collapse of the USSR. Russian Review The author takes her readers on a profound journey through time and across geographic borders. In clear, engaging language, she finds a balance between culturally rich ethnographic examples and complex theoretical interpretations, introducing a folkloric perspective that is largely underrepresented in diaspora studies. Mariya Lesiv, Memorial University of Newfoundland The author takes her readers on a profound journey through time and across geographic borders. In clear, engaging language, she finds a balance between culturally rich ethnographic examples and complex theoretical interpretations, introducing a folkloric perspective that is largely underrepresented in diaspora studies. --Mariya Lesiv, Memorial University of Newfoundland Author InformationNatalia Khanenko-Friesen is an associate professor of cultural anthropology, head of the Department of Religion and Culture at St. Thomas More College, Canada, and a founder of the Oral History Program and Personal Sources Archives at the Prairie Centre for the Study of Ukrainian Heritage, all at the University of Saskatchewan, Canada. She is the founding editor of the Engaged Scholar Journal: Community-Engaged Research, Teaching and Learning. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |