
For the Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian exile communities that emerged in the aftermath of World War II and the occupation of their respective homelands, the arts became a way to both perpetuate their identity in the free world and to explore the predicaments wrought by the condition of exile. Within the diasporas’ literary scenes, the works that touched upon the exilic experience varied from attempts to recapture and preserve lost homelands to contemplations on trauma and displacement.
In approaching this topic, my interest lies more in the latter and the potential of artistic expression to serve as a platform in exploring perspectives often overlooked in greater narratives and discouraged in public discourse. Literary works that dealt with ambivalent and negative themes, such as assimilation, generational conflict and wartime trauma were often met with a mixed response from the exile communities but still represented experiences present within them.
Using the notions of belonging and identity as focal points in piecing together this picture of literary expressions of the post-WWII Baltic diasporas, I will examine a variety of texts, ranging from novels to drama, fictional to autobiographical, that touch upon ambivalent or even polemical experiences of exile. My project will seek to highlight this important perspective within the Baltic exile narrative and demonstrate recurring similarities in how it plays out within different Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian literary works.
Publications from the project
- “‘Go there – you don’t know where, Find that – you don’t know what!’: New framings from new generation Estonian and Latvian diaspora writers’ short stories in the 1960s,” in Baltic Peripeties – The Power of Narration and the Making of Regions, ed. Eckhard Schumacher and Cordelia Heß. Göttingen: V&R unipress, 2025: 243-256, https://doi.org/10.14220/9783737017008.243.
- “How to Resolve the Trauma of Exile? Negotiating Cultural Trauma in Three Baltic Exile Plays from the 1970s North America,” Theatre and Social Responsibility, special issue of Nordic Theatre Studies 34,1 (2022): 34-48, https://doi.org/10.7146/nts.v34i1.137924.