ABSTRACT

Vieda Skultans left Latvia as a refugee at the age of six months. In 1990, she returned for the first time. This text is both a personal account of a homecoming and an anthropology of a people trying to come to terms with its past and to face an uncertain future. Based on more than 100 interviews carried out in the wake of Latvian independence, it gives voice to stories of dispossession and exile and of ambiguous returns. At the same time it unpicks the process of memory itself, showing how personal memory is shaped by the traditional narratives of national history and culture.

chapter 1|8 pages

A FAMILY HISTORY

chapter 2|6 pages

A CHRONICLE OF RESEARCH

chapter 3|16 pages

ORDER IN NARRATIVE EXPERIENCE

chapter 4|12 pages

READING LETTERS

chapter 5|20 pages

DESTINY AND THE SHAPING OF AUTOBIOGRAPHY

chapter 6|16 pages

THE EXPROPRIATION OF BIOGRAPHY

chapter 7|20 pages

THE LIVED AND THE REMEMBERED FOREST

chapter 8|22 pages

DAMAGED LIVES, DAMAGED HEALTH

chapter 9|18 pages

MEANINGS LOST AND GAINED

chapter 10|16 pages

HABITABLE IDENTITIES