A Small Literature in the Service of Nation-Building: the Estonian Case
A Small Literature in the Service of Nation-Building: the Estonian Case
Author(s): Arne Merilai, Katre TalvisteSubject(s): Cultural history, Estonian Literature, Culture and social structure , Sociology of Culture, Period(s) of Nation Building, Theory of Literature, Identity of Collectives
Published by: Tartu Ülikooli Kirjastus
Keywords: Estonian literature; small literatures; nation-building; self-colonization; Romanticism;
Summary/Abstract: The idea of Estonia’s cultural and national self-sufficiency emerged in the nineteenth century. The contribution of writers and poets was essential to this development. Literature anticipated not only cultural, linguistic, and artistic, but also the economic and political emancipation of Estonians. Cultural practices leading to this emancipation were largely based on Baltic German models; many key elements to the independent Estonian national identity are of foreign origin. On the one hand, the nineteenth-century nationbuilding could therefore be described as self-colonization. On the other hand, it rather created a new nation than transformed a preexisting one, since the very concept of national identity was introduced by this process. Through various political and cultural upheavals, the most influential authors from this seminal period of the Estonian modern culture have remained iconic to this day. The traditional identification with them is so strong that the tentative origins of the nation and the identitary struggles of the national poets themselves may often be forgotten and the personal and individual nature of their contribution downplayed.
Journal: Interlitteraria
- Issue Year: XXIV/2019
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 247-260
- Page Count: 14
- Language: English