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E-grāmata: Long Night at the Vepsian Museum: The Forest Folk of Northern Russia and the Struggle for Cultural Survival

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Davidov uses a tour of the local museum to introduce a cast of human and non-human characters from traditional Vepsian culture, and to explore various time periods under Russian, Finnish, Soviet, and post-Soviet rule.

Based on ethnographic fieldwork and archival research, this book takes readers to the village of Sheltozero in northern Russia. This tiny community is populated by an indigenous people known as Veps, colloquially referred to as the “forest folk” for their intense affiliation with forests on their ancestral lands. Davidov uses a tour of the local museum to introduce a cast of human and non-human characters from traditional Vepsian culture, and to explore various time periods under Russian, Finnish, Soviet, and post-Soviet rule. In the process, she examines how contemporary political struggles mesh with traditional beliefs while illustrating how Veps make meaning of their history and their unfolding future.

Recenzijas

"Long Night at the Vepsian Museum is an ethnography that documents the history and current cultural struggles of the Veps people, a Finno-Ugric speaking minority community that lives in Russias Karelia region, on the border with Finland." -- Samantha Lomb * EuropeNow * "Long Night at the Vepsian Museum, is a well-written and engaging contribution to the literature on Post-Soviet Russia and indigenous cultural production. Moreover, the books accessibility and clean prose will make it of interest to not only scholars of these fields, but also undergraduate educators looking for a snappy and thought-provoking syllabus addition." -- A. Lorraine Kaljund * EuropeNow * "By juxtaposing relations between Veps craftspeople and the czarist and soviet states with traditions of reciprocity with master spirits that ensured Karelias natural bounty, Davidov offers an altogether new paradigm for understanding Indegeneity in the modern world." -- E. J. Vajda * Choice Connect, June 2018 vol. 55 # 10 * "One of Davidovs strengths lies in the place that she chose as a base for fieldwork: the local museum. Despite the idea that such institutions present only rigid, official discourses about real and lively cultures, what Davidov successfully reveals is that behind the facade of public exhibitions, there is an important vein of hidden and non-official cultural knowledge transfer and production taking place." -- Tatiana Safonova * Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute *

List of Illustrations
ix
Acknowledgments xi
Preface xiii
Introduction 1(12)
Chapter 1 History and Memory
13(24)
Chapter 2 Vepsian Cosmologies
37(18)
Chapter 3 Spruce Eyelashes and Blue Eyes of Lakes
55(14)
Chapter 4 The Bad Masters
69(12)
Chapter 5 The Long Night of Museums
81(28)
Conclusion 109(6)
Glossary 115(2)
References 117(6)
Index 123
Veronica Davidov is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Monmouth University.