Quietly postcolonial: the impact of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine on curation strategies in Estonia
Date
2024
Authors
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Publisher
Tartu Ülikool
Abstract
It is widely understood that moments of great geopolitical change have a profound impact on
the manufacture and treatment of the past. Russia’s 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine has not
only revealed the politicisation and weaponisation of history and memory, but also prompted
more intensive discussions among scholars and politicians about the application of postcolonial
perspectives and methods in the states with an entangled history with Russia. Two years on
from the onset of the full-scale conflict, this thesis seeks to examine whether postcolonial
approaches have also had a wider impact on national narratives, as reflected in museum design
and curation strategies. By utilising a single-case study of Estonian National Museum/Eesti
Rahva Muuseum (ERM) and combining ethnographic observational analysis and five expert
interviews with museum workers, this thesis analyses the state of Estonian national memory in
the year 2024. Whereas most previous studies on memory and postcolonialism in the Baltic
states have been confined to the twentieth century, this thesis broadens these empirics and
utilises a longue durée approach to Estonia’s national master narrative in order to show the
interconnectedness of the different layers of Estonia’s past, rather than treating its different
elements in isolation. The findings revealed that, in contrast to the wake-up call that much of
academia has experienced, ERM has rather been operating in a “quietly postcolonial” manner
for some time, suggesting that this public-facing institution has been ahead of much of
academia and political discourse.