6533b7d4fe1ef96bd1261cb7

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Forbidden and sublime forest landscapes: narrated experiences of Latvian national partisan women after World War II

Sanita Reinsone

subject

HistoryWorld War IISubject (philosophy)Endangered speciesLatvianSublimelanguage.human_languagePoliticsPolitical scienceLawPolitical Science and International RelationsCold warlanguageEthnologyResistance (creativity)

description

At the beginning of the Cold War, tens of thousands of Baltic people headed for the forests. It was the largest and longest such experience of human and forest interaction in the history of the three Baltic countries. The forest was turned into a political concept and had abruptly become a doubly sensitive zone: to the authorities it was a space of revolt subject to their control; to the locals, the forests were transformed into sites of both resistance and shelter when life was endangered. Based on recorded life story interviews, this article examines how women experienced the changes in their native landscapes after World War II in the occupied Baltic states, and what it meant for them to be labelled “forest outlaws”.

https://doi.org/10.1080/14682745.2014.986108