By addressing recent discussions on reception within the field of memory studies, this article aims to analyze the reasons for the alleged absence of public memory relating to the history of Ingria and the experiences of Ingrian Finns in Finland by focusing on Inkerin romaani (2002), a posthumous novel by Toivo Pekkanen. Through analysis of three scales of reception, the article explores the dynamics of memory and affordances of memorability. It argues that understanding memory dynamics requires looking at the reception of memory as well as its blockages. Moreover, this article suggests that these aspects of memory dynamics can be fruitfully analyzed and theorized through the notion of affordances of memorability.Peer reviewe
The events of the Second World War left considerable material remains in Finnish Lapland, ranging fr...
The Karelian Evacuation Trail is an annual reenactment event which commemorates the uprooting of the...
Until the Interwar period, the majority of the Finnish population lived in small peasant communities...
By addressing recent discussions on reception within the field of memory studies, this article aims ...
In this article, I explore the memory and great transformation of Ingrian Finnish families originall...
After the Second World War Finland had to cede territories to the Soviet Union, and Finnish people f...
This article addressed the problematic and politics of memory in relation to a difficult stage in th...
By analyzing oral history interviews of former child and youth internees, the chapter explores the r...
This article describes the features of the collective memory of Kalevala District residents about th...
This article deals with how remembering the Second World War is conveyed in Bernard Kangro’s last th...
In this article, I examine the intertextuality of reminiscence writings of Karelian evacuees in Finl...
Abstract My article focuses on the places of memory and utopias, on how a lost Karelia has been cons...
On the basis of the September 1944 Moscow Armistice agreement between Finland, the Soviet Union and ...
The subject of the article is the ‘memory war’ over the memory of the Civil War of 1918 in Vyborg, a...
Research on the phenomenon of nostalgia has been notably shaped by the interest taken by sociologist...
The events of the Second World War left considerable material remains in Finnish Lapland, ranging fr...
The Karelian Evacuation Trail is an annual reenactment event which commemorates the uprooting of the...
Until the Interwar period, the majority of the Finnish population lived in small peasant communities...
By addressing recent discussions on reception within the field of memory studies, this article aims ...
In this article, I explore the memory and great transformation of Ingrian Finnish families originall...
After the Second World War Finland had to cede territories to the Soviet Union, and Finnish people f...
This article addressed the problematic and politics of memory in relation to a difficult stage in th...
By analyzing oral history interviews of former child and youth internees, the chapter explores the r...
This article describes the features of the collective memory of Kalevala District residents about th...
This article deals with how remembering the Second World War is conveyed in Bernard Kangro’s last th...
In this article, I examine the intertextuality of reminiscence writings of Karelian evacuees in Finl...
Abstract My article focuses on the places of memory and utopias, on how a lost Karelia has been cons...
On the basis of the September 1944 Moscow Armistice agreement between Finland, the Soviet Union and ...
The subject of the article is the ‘memory war’ over the memory of the Civil War of 1918 in Vyborg, a...
Research on the phenomenon of nostalgia has been notably shaped by the interest taken by sociologist...
The events of the Second World War left considerable material remains in Finnish Lapland, ranging fr...
The Karelian Evacuation Trail is an annual reenactment event which commemorates the uprooting of the...
Until the Interwar period, the majority of the Finnish population lived in small peasant communities...