Estonian Community houses were built in towns and the countryside by local people, who joined cultural and other societies since the second half of the 19th century. These cultural centers supported the process of Estonian state building. During the years of the first Estonian independent state (1918–1940), the network of community houses was set up by the state. After the invasion of the Baltic states by the Soviet Union in 1940, extensive restructuring or sovietization of the Estonian public administration, economy and culture, began. The article examines the sovietization process of Estonian community houses, i.e., how they were turned into the ideological tools of Soviet totalitarian propaganda.peerReviewe
Since historical memory is a vital element of national unity and identity in oppressed nations that ...
The presented research focuses on the alteration of Estonian city space awareness within the period ...
For Estonians, similarly to many other peoples, the German occupation (1941–44) stood for massive re...
This article deals with a particularly diffi cult period in the history of the Russian Orthodox Chur...
The article gives an insight into the challenges related to shaping the historical identity of the E...
During the Cold War, a massive organisation for cultural diplomacy was developed in the Soviet Union...
Estonia's rise to prominence on the leading edge of the Soviet reform process is a consequence of t...
MA Egge Kulbok-Lattikin kulttuuri- ja yhteiskuntapolitiikan väitöskirjatyön ”The Historical Forma...
The article deals with the impacts of the policy of the 1940s-1950s Soviet authority on the Estonian...
Käesolev uurimus on valla tasandi poliitiliste institutsioonide ja laiemalt kohalikku haldust teosta...
This article critically discusses the publication entitled Sovietisation and violence: the case of E...
Abstract: Tartu State University in the sphere of interest of the state security organs in 1950 Afte...
Eastern Europe provides an interesting case study for the effects of life under occupation and how p...
Signing the Treaty of Tartu between the Republic of Estonia and Soviet Russia on 2 February 1920 gav...
The article analyzes the formation of the imperial policy to spread Orthodox Christianity using the ...
Since historical memory is a vital element of national unity and identity in oppressed nations that ...
The presented research focuses on the alteration of Estonian city space awareness within the period ...
For Estonians, similarly to many other peoples, the German occupation (1941–44) stood for massive re...
This article deals with a particularly diffi cult period in the history of the Russian Orthodox Chur...
The article gives an insight into the challenges related to shaping the historical identity of the E...
During the Cold War, a massive organisation for cultural diplomacy was developed in the Soviet Union...
Estonia's rise to prominence on the leading edge of the Soviet reform process is a consequence of t...
MA Egge Kulbok-Lattikin kulttuuri- ja yhteiskuntapolitiikan väitöskirjatyön ”The Historical Forma...
The article deals with the impacts of the policy of the 1940s-1950s Soviet authority on the Estonian...
Käesolev uurimus on valla tasandi poliitiliste institutsioonide ja laiemalt kohalikku haldust teosta...
This article critically discusses the publication entitled Sovietisation and violence: the case of E...
Abstract: Tartu State University in the sphere of interest of the state security organs in 1950 Afte...
Eastern Europe provides an interesting case study for the effects of life under occupation and how p...
Signing the Treaty of Tartu between the Republic of Estonia and Soviet Russia on 2 February 1920 gav...
The article analyzes the formation of the imperial policy to spread Orthodox Christianity using the ...
Since historical memory is a vital element of national unity and identity in oppressed nations that ...
The presented research focuses on the alteration of Estonian city space awareness within the period ...
For Estonians, similarly to many other peoples, the German occupation (1941–44) stood for massive re...