ABSTRACT

Belarus is often regarded as "Europe’s last dictatorship", a sort-of fossilized leftover from the Soviet Union. However, a key factor in determining Belarus’s development, including its likely future development, is its own sense of identity. This book explores the complex debates and competing narratives surrounding Belarus’s identity, revealing a far more diverse picture than the widely accepted monolithic post-Soviet nation. It examines in a range of media including historiography, films and literature how visions of Belarus as a nation have been constructed from the nineteenth century to the present day. It outlines a complex picture of contested myths – the "peasant nation" of the nineteenth century, the devoted Soviet republic of the late twentieth century and the revisionist Belarusian nationalism of the present. The author shows that Belarus is characterized by immense cultural, linguistic and ethnic polyphony, both in its lived history and in its cultural imaginary. The book analyses important examples of writing in and about Belarus, in Belarusian, Polish and Russian, revealing how different modes of rooted cosmopolitanism have been articulated.

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

Alternative visions

part I|56 pages

Contexts (1800–1991)

chapter 1|26 pages

An abundant harvest

The emergence of Belarusian memory

chapter 2|28 pages

By force of myth

The making of the partisan republic

part II|56 pages

Texts of resistance (1956–1991)

chapter 3|29 pages

Memory at war

Un-writing the partisan republic

chapter 4|25 pages

Retrofitting rebellion

Defiance and laughter as hybrid memory

part III|64 pages

Texts of renewal (1991–2016)

chapter 5|28 pages

Still fighting

The afterlife of the partisan republic

chapter 6|27 pages

Divided legacies

Towards cosmopolitan mourning

chapter |7 pages

Afterword

On cosmopolitan memory