LAP Lambert Academic Publishing ( 2010-05-18 )
€ 79,00
In December 2007, the Estonian government ordered a bronze statue of a Soviet soldier moved in a Tallinn square to a more obscure location. The statue, which was erected in 1947, was regarded by ethnic Estonians as a symbol of Soviet occupation and had become an icon of “old space”. It was perceived to be a symbol of an earlier imperialistic and colonial Soviet occupying force. At the same time, the large ethnic-Russian population in Estonia perceived it as a symbol of liberation from the Nazis and the Russian parliament responded by denouncing the move. The statue, like a newspaper or museum, was a tool in promoting an illegitimate identity for many. The statue’s removal would more easily permit the creation (or recreation) of new space and a new time for the nation-state of Estonia. Ethnic Estonians, both politicians and the voters who elect them, would consolidate their own “imagined community.”
Book Details: |
|
ISBN-13: |
978-3-8383-0697-1 |
ISBN-10: |
383830697X |
EAN: |
9783838306971 |
Book language: |
English |
By (author) : |
Michael Ardovino |
Number of pages: |
328 |
Published on: |
2010-05-18 |
Category: |
Political science |