Territories, Boundaries and Consciousness: The Changing Geographies of the Finnish-Russian BorderWiley, 1996 - 353 páginas Recent years have witnessed the most substantial changes in the world system of states and their boundaries since World War II. The key division between the states in the world system the former deep ideological divide between East and West has disappeared. The border between Finland and Russia was a frontier between East and West and had a long history as a fundamental dividing line between contrasting cultural and political systems. Territories, Boundaries and Consciousness is the first geographical analysis of how this critical border evolved. This original and well-illustrated book is much more than a local study. It presents both a theoretically informed analysis of the construction of territories and their boundaries and a richly detailed geohistory of the changing geography of Finland. It traces the nature of the nation-building process, the rise of the nation state and the changing position of this emerging new state in the world geopolitical landscape. The history of the construction of the Finnish Russian border is analyzed on the basis of modern geopolitical and social theory, leading to an interpretation of the changing role of the boundary in the socio-spatial consciousness of the Finnish people. This important theoretical analysis is a key reformulation of boundary studies as well as a fascinating experienced examination of a critical geographical fault-line in world history. It is essential reading for postgraduates of political and cultural geography, history, international relations, Russian studies, as well as for those with an interest in international politics. |
Palavras e frases frequentes
Academic Karelia Society activities aims analysis argued attitudes basis became become border areas ceded civil collective connections constitute construction context continued created cultural discourse discussed distinction eastern Finland Eastern Karelia economic emerging established everyday exploited fact Figure Finnic Finnish language Finnish nation Finnish society foreign policy forms geopolitical Greater Finland groups Helsinki Hence idea ideological important individual industrial inhabitants institutional institutionalization integration interpretations Joensuu Kalevala Karelian areas Lake Ladoga landscape language living locality located manifestations military nation building nation-states national identity nature nineteenth century organization Paasi Paasivirta 1984 particularly Peace of Moscow points political geography put forward regarded regional transformation relations representations Reproduced rhetoric role Russia social consciousness socio-spatial consciousness Soviet Union space spatial scales specific stereotypes structures Suomen symbols territorial units textbooks Tohmajärvi Topelius tradition typical Värtsilä Western Winter War workers World War II