The Imagological Approach to Lithuanian and Latvian Contemporary Émigré Narratives

A newly deployed identity, separated from its natural location, loses its solid national or ethnic status and hybridizes, acquiring features of the new context. Employing the concepts of self-image, imageme and counter-image introduced by contemporary literary imagology (Joep Leerssen), the article...

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Main Author: Laura Laurušaitė
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: University of Tartu Press 2015-07-01
Series:Interlitteraria
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/IL/article/view/12163
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spelling doaj-f70c0a919d164e5b92203b39760151d72020-11-25T03:25:28ZdeuUniversity of Tartu PressInterlitteraria1406-07012228-47292015-07-0120110.12697/IL.2015.20.1.13The Imagological Approach to Lithuanian and Latvian Contemporary Émigré NarrativesLaura Laurušaitė0Lietuvos edukologijos universitetas, T. Ševčenkos g. 31, LT-03111 Vilnius A newly deployed identity, separated from its natural location, loses its solid national or ethnic status and hybridizes, acquiring features of the new context. Employing the concepts of self-image, imageme and counter-image introduced by contemporary literary imagology (Joep Leerssen), the article focuses on the 21st century Lithuanian and Latvian émigré prose to provide an overview of a dislocated tradition and images that encode the continuity or transformation of the national identity. The aim of the discussion is to raise the issue of the specifics of the Baltic ethnic and national identity in the changing mobile world. The focus of the analysis is not on the social, but exceptionally on literary images, which are classified into topical image groups: ethnic images, Eastern European projections and exoticism as an extension of domestic identity. Literary representations bear witness to the atrophy of ethnic and national consciousness, shifting expression of Baltic images, and their creative employment in the new contexts. Applied to the norms and standards of the new (e) migrant society, traditional ethnic and national imagery often looses the common Baltic implications and offers other arguments for self-identification. The inherited patterns of Soviet mentality determine a similar structure of the characters’ consciousness, identical personal values and motivational mechanisms that bear witness to a common stock type “Eastern European”. This is a certain social type with the entire preconceived repertoire of stereotypical images describing the subject of post-Soviet descent. This subject appears in émigré narratives as the inferior figure of the labourer with low self-esteem, a person of no reputation guided by amorality and aggressiveness. Although, at first glance, all the personal and national characteristics of the homo post-sovieticus appear to be negatively charged, every unfavourable estimation contains the positive counterpart of the imageme that can be activated at any given moment (e. g., passivity/faithfulness, humility/patience, primitiveness/honesty, etc.). Baltic literary works produced in more remote and exotic countries (China, Turkey and Georgia), reveal the Baltic identity as European (more specifically – Northern) as opposed to Russian or the Soviet one, and demonstrate the authors’ propensity for embracing it. Common representational clichés of a distant culture as the incomprehensible and foreign Other and of the Orient as the cradle of despotism are being disproved. The images under discussion reflect Lithuanian and Latvian collective representations and the key changes happening in the national identity of the Baltic nations in emigration. https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/IL/article/view/12163literary imagologynational identityethnic imageEastern Europeanimagemeexoticism
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura Laurušaitė
spellingShingle Laura Laurušaitė
The Imagological Approach to Lithuanian and Latvian Contemporary Émigré Narratives
Interlitteraria
literary imagology
national identity
ethnic image
Eastern European
imageme
exoticism
author_facet Laura Laurušaitė
author_sort Laura Laurušaitė
title The Imagological Approach to Lithuanian and Latvian Contemporary Émigré Narratives
title_short The Imagological Approach to Lithuanian and Latvian Contemporary Émigré Narratives
title_full The Imagological Approach to Lithuanian and Latvian Contemporary Émigré Narratives
title_fullStr The Imagological Approach to Lithuanian and Latvian Contemporary Émigré Narratives
title_full_unstemmed The Imagological Approach to Lithuanian and Latvian Contemporary Émigré Narratives
title_sort imagological approach to lithuanian and latvian contemporary émigré narratives
publisher University of Tartu Press
series Interlitteraria
issn 1406-0701
2228-4729
publishDate 2015-07-01
description A newly deployed identity, separated from its natural location, loses its solid national or ethnic status and hybridizes, acquiring features of the new context. Employing the concepts of self-image, imageme and counter-image introduced by contemporary literary imagology (Joep Leerssen), the article focuses on the 21st century Lithuanian and Latvian émigré prose to provide an overview of a dislocated tradition and images that encode the continuity or transformation of the national identity. The aim of the discussion is to raise the issue of the specifics of the Baltic ethnic and national identity in the changing mobile world. The focus of the analysis is not on the social, but exceptionally on literary images, which are classified into topical image groups: ethnic images, Eastern European projections and exoticism as an extension of domestic identity. Literary representations bear witness to the atrophy of ethnic and national consciousness, shifting expression of Baltic images, and their creative employment in the new contexts. Applied to the norms and standards of the new (e) migrant society, traditional ethnic and national imagery often looses the common Baltic implications and offers other arguments for self-identification. The inherited patterns of Soviet mentality determine a similar structure of the characters’ consciousness, identical personal values and motivational mechanisms that bear witness to a common stock type “Eastern European”. This is a certain social type with the entire preconceived repertoire of stereotypical images describing the subject of post-Soviet descent. This subject appears in émigré narratives as the inferior figure of the labourer with low self-esteem, a person of no reputation guided by amorality and aggressiveness. Although, at first glance, all the personal and national characteristics of the homo post-sovieticus appear to be negatively charged, every unfavourable estimation contains the positive counterpart of the imageme that can be activated at any given moment (e. g., passivity/faithfulness, humility/patience, primitiveness/honesty, etc.). Baltic literary works produced in more remote and exotic countries (China, Turkey and Georgia), reveal the Baltic identity as European (more specifically – Northern) as opposed to Russian or the Soviet one, and demonstrate the authors’ propensity for embracing it. Common representational clichés of a distant culture as the incomprehensible and foreign Other and of the Orient as the cradle of despotism are being disproved. The images under discussion reflect Lithuanian and Latvian collective representations and the key changes happening in the national identity of the Baltic nations in emigration.
topic literary imagology
national identity
ethnic image
Eastern European
imageme
exoticism
url https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/IL/article/view/12163
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