The Estonians are a small nation. Therefore, our relationship to our own culture is to a certain extent different from that of the big nations. The peculiarities of ones own culture are mainly perceived through comparison with others. The wave of national awakenings reached Estonia in the middle ofthe 19th century. By that time some Baltic-German organizations of an enlightening character had emerged, mainly focusing their attention on native people - the ones whose ethnic ancestors had lived in Estonia long before the Germans, Danes, Swedes, Poles, andfinally, the Russians had reached here. The main policy of alien authorities was to occupy our strategically and commercially important territory. The best means for achieving this was war: I...
Cultural divesity in Estonian society can be examined as a continual dynamic process. During the fir...
The idea of Estonia’s cultural and national self-sufficiency emerged in the nineteenth century. The ...
The primary argument of this article is that the Estonian “cultural turn” to modernity was already o...
The focus of this article is the historical context of the Finno-Ugric collection in the Estonian Na...
Estonia is the only country where Estonian is the official language and it is a country rich in folk...
This article aspires to shed light on the complex relations of art historyat the Estonian national u...
Eastern Europe provides an interesting case study for the effects of life under occupation and how p...
In this article I deal with the first extensive and comprehensive permanent exhibition of Estonian f...
Defence date: 30 June 2016Examining Board: Professor Pavel Kolár (EUI) - Supervisor; Professor Alexa...
In this article I attempt to analyse the way in which the Estonian national costume, as heritage, wa...
Digiteeritud Euroopa Regionaalarengu Fondi rahastusel, projekti "Eesti teadus- ja õppekirjandus" (20...
Thesis (M.Ed.)--University of Melbourne, 1987This study is based on an historical perspective which ...
Inspired by Barbro Klein’s research on silences and exclusions in the Swedish folklife sphere, this ...
Ellen Värv, Correspondents' contribution to the Estonian National Museum. Created in 1909, the Museu...
In the 18th–19th century, several Protestant religious movements spread in Estonia. These movements ...
Cultural divesity in Estonian society can be examined as a continual dynamic process. During the fir...
The idea of Estonia’s cultural and national self-sufficiency emerged in the nineteenth century. The ...
The primary argument of this article is that the Estonian “cultural turn” to modernity was already o...
The focus of this article is the historical context of the Finno-Ugric collection in the Estonian Na...
Estonia is the only country where Estonian is the official language and it is a country rich in folk...
This article aspires to shed light on the complex relations of art historyat the Estonian national u...
Eastern Europe provides an interesting case study for the effects of life under occupation and how p...
In this article I deal with the first extensive and comprehensive permanent exhibition of Estonian f...
Defence date: 30 June 2016Examining Board: Professor Pavel Kolár (EUI) - Supervisor; Professor Alexa...
In this article I attempt to analyse the way in which the Estonian national costume, as heritage, wa...
Digiteeritud Euroopa Regionaalarengu Fondi rahastusel, projekti "Eesti teadus- ja õppekirjandus" (20...
Thesis (M.Ed.)--University of Melbourne, 1987This study is based on an historical perspective which ...
Inspired by Barbro Klein’s research on silences and exclusions in the Swedish folklife sphere, this ...
Ellen Värv, Correspondents' contribution to the Estonian National Museum. Created in 1909, the Museu...
In the 18th–19th century, several Protestant religious movements spread in Estonia. These movements ...
Cultural divesity in Estonian society can be examined as a continual dynamic process. During the fir...
The idea of Estonia’s cultural and national self-sufficiency emerged in the nineteenth century. The ...
The primary argument of this article is that the Estonian “cultural turn” to modernity was already o...