ABSTRACT

Mental and material reconstruction was an ongoing process after World War II, and it still is. This volume combines a detailed treatment of post-war cultural reconstruction in Finnish Lapland – a region on the geographical and historical margins of its nation-state – with comparative case studies of silent post-war memory from other European countries The contributors shed light on key aspects of cultural reconstruction generally: disruptions of national narratives, difficulties of post-war cultural demobilisation, sites of memory, visual narratives of post-war reconstruction, and manifestations of trans-generational experiences of cultural reconstruction.

Exploration of the less conspicuous aspects of mental reconstruction reveals various forms of post-war silence and silencing which have halted or hindered different groups of people in their mental return to peace. Rather than focusing on the “executive level” of material reconstruction, the volume turns its gaze towards those who experienced the return to peace in the mental, societal, and historical margins: members of ethnic, religious, and cultural minorities, women, and children.

The chapters draw on archival and other original sources, personal memories, autobiographical interpretations, and academic debate. The volume is relevant for scholars and advanced students in the fields of cultural history, art history, and cultural studies.

Chapter 7 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at https://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons [Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND)] 4.0 license. Funded by Jyväskylä university.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

part I|147 pages

Reconstructing Hopes, Memories, and Narratives

chapter 1|24 pages

Post-War Cultural Reconstruction and the Nation

Some Comparative Considerations

chapter 3|13 pages

The Politics of Silences

Women's War Experiences and the Discourses of Reconstruction in Poland (1945–1948)

chapter 4|20 pages

“This Is My Past” 1

War, Memory, and Forgiveness in Rosa Liksom's The Colonel's Wife

chapter 5|13 pages

Petsamo

A Region Lost, a People Ignored

chapter 6|24 pages

Less Holy?

Reconstructing Eastern Orthodoxy in Post-War Finnish Lapland

chapter 7|19 pages

Reconstructed Landscapes of Northern Youth

Reading the Autobiographies of Finnish Youth, 1945–1960

chapter 8|12 pages

Reconstructing Haunted Places

Postmemory and Ancestral Homelands

part II|69 pages

Reconstructing Landscapes and Mindscapes

chapter 9|16 pages

Prison Island

Place of Remembrance or Place of Parley?

chapter 11|17 pages

“On the Border Between Past and Future”

Two Male Artists of Lapland and Their Relationship to Nature