‘I should never tell anybody that my mother was shot’:understanding personal testimony and family memories within Soviet Lapland

This article examines the biography of a dual-heritage descendant of a Norwegian settler and indigenous Sámi on the Kola Peninsula in north-west Russia, whose parents became victims of Stalin’s terror. Analysing personal experience with oral history methods reveals that the protagonists were trying...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Allemann, Lukas
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.ulapland.fi/fi/publications/9d5ad54f-67e7-43df-943c-55d8acdaaaaf
https://lacris.ulapland.fi/ws/files/5510549/Saami_Soviet_Norwegian_Allemann_OHS_190501_PRE_PRINT.pdf
Description
Summary:This article examines the biography of a dual-heritage descendant of a Norwegian settler and indigenous Sámi on the Kola Peninsula in north-west Russia, whose parents became victims of Stalin’s terror. Analysing personal experience with oral history methods reveals that the protagonists were trying to shape actively their own and their fellows’ fates. This challenges the common script of passive victims within a totalitarian state. The narrator’s emphasis on agency as well as her humanising of state representatives are discussed as ways of giving meaning to her family’s history and strategies for coping with traumatic childhood events.