A Town That Never Was – Archipelagos, Edgelands, Imaginations
2021 (English)In: Karib - Nordic Journal for Caribbean Studies, ISSN 1894-8421, E-ISSN 2387-6743, Vol. 6, no 1, article id 2Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
This article is an attempt at an interplay between Édouard Glissant’s archipelagic thinking, Marion Shoard’s edgeland and an imagined geography and history of a particular location and the people who have lived there. The town of Paldiski – the Baltic Port – bordering the Gulf of Finland, may be a remarkable Glissantian vantage point, and simultaneously an edgeland from which to draw attention to the creationand persistence of the ‘imaginaire’ that Glissant argued binds people as much as economic transactions. The port is both closed (as a military base or due to customs regulations) and open as a harbour. Thus, it frames all kinds of flows of peoples, materials and policies, yet it is on the edge literally and figuratively. In Paldiski, the imaginary seems independent of the physical environment, the past and future, and the people highlighted by the lifepaths of two historic figures.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Stockholm University Press, 2021. Vol. 6, no 1, article id 2
Keywords [en]
edgeland, ethnicity, Paldiski (Baltic Port), Carl Friedrich Kalk, Salawat Yulayev
National Category
History
Research subject
Baltic and East European studies
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:sh:diva-48459DOI: 10.16993/karib.86OAI: oai:DiVA.org:sh-48459DiVA, id: diva2:1639999
Part of project
A New Region of the World?, The Foundation for Baltic and East European Studies
Funder
The Foundation for Baltic and East European Studies, 77/20152022-02-232022-02-232022-02-23Bibliographically approved