Remains of the Soviet Past in Estonia

An Anthropology of Forgetting, Repair and Urban Traces

eBook, 274 pages

English language

Published April 21, 2018 by UCL Press.

ISBN:
978-1-78735-354-1
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3 stars (1 review)

What happens to legacies that do not find any continuation? In Estonia, a new generation that does not remember the socialist era and is open to global influences has grown up. As a result, the impact of the Soviet memory in people’s conventional values is losing its effective power, opening new opportunities for repair and revaluation of the past.

Francisco Martinez brings together a number of sites of interest to explore the vanquishing of the Soviet legacy in Estonia: the railway bazaar in Tallinn where concepts such as ‘market’ and ‘employment’ take on distinctly different meanings from their Western use; Linnahall, a grandiose venue, whose Soviet heritage now poses diffi cult questions of how to present the building’s history; Tallinn’s cityscape, where the social, spatial and temporal co-evolution of the city can be viewed and debated; Narva, a city that marks the border between the Russian Federation, NATO and the …

2 editions

Good in parts

3 stars

Self-described 'fringy anthropology' of Soviet legacies and 'wasting' in 2010s Estonia strives to make an asset of its 'polyphony of vignettes', but ultimately fails to cohere. Good chapters on repair practices, a street market, and the social and symbolic half-life of a disused late Soviet stadium and leisure complex, but the book gets weaker as it progresses, and the frame of focus widens. Scrappily written, occasionally compelling, but insufficiently disciplined, falling short of my (admittedly high) expectations.