ABSTRACT

This book brings together life stories from five generations of Balts, living through the diverse and recurring transformations of the twentieth century: occupations, war, independence, totalitarianism, and democratic rule and market economy. The twentieth century history of the Baltic countries has often been deeply tragic. Lying on the coastline of the Baltic Sea, these rather small but strategically well located territories have historically found themselves in the middle of many power struggles between larger states, empires and other power-holders: the Teutonic Knights, Swedish kings, Tsarist Russia, Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union. Today, they are once again forced to stand up to the Russian Federation.

Biographical interviewing is a field focused on individuals, and on how those individuals choose to re-create and present their lived lives, make meaning of it through the narratives they tell. To interpret the biographical narrations of Lithuanians, Latvians and Estonians, shaped by complex and controversial historical background, the authors use Pierre Bourdieu’s concept of social and cultural capitals, the principles of Erving Goffman’s framing analysis and Alessandro Portelli’s distinction of private and public spheres, Anton Steen’s investigations of post-Socialist elites and Piotr Sztompka’s theory of cultural trauma, etc. Given analyses of particular biographical narrations are supplemented by brief historical and sociological overviews, which allow the reader to better understand the contexts of lived lives, and the mental atmosphere in which the interviews were conducted.

chapter 1|22 pages

Introduction

On living through the twentieth century in the Baltic states

chapter 2|14 pages

Locating memory within history

Baltic lives in their context

chapter 3|16 pages

Everyday life, power, and agency in turbulent Latvia

The story of Otto Irbe

chapter 5|18 pages

Working through mature socialism

Private and public in the life story of an Estonian industry manager

chapter 6|21 pages

Let me tell you a sad story

Soviet Russian immigrants in independent Estonia

chapter 7|18 pages

Rural belongings

Baltic Russian identities in Estonian and Latvian borderlands

chapter 8|21 pages

Exit from communism

Career decisions of the Lithuanian young communist functionaries

chapter 9|17 pages

Catching up with the West?

An insider's perspective from Lithuania

chapter 10|20 pages

Mobilizing capitals during transitions

The stories of Toomas and Nikolai

chapter 11|20 pages

Background for biographical research

Value change in Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Sweden in 1991–2007