Fearlessness and Resistance in the Gulag: Estonian Prison Camp Poetry

During and after the Second World War, over 50,000 Estonians were sent to Soviet prison and forced labour camps. Within these camps, some of the repressed Estonians developed their own subculture – prison camp poetry, secretly written on sheets of paper and also memorised. The poems examined in the...

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Main Author: Rebekka Lotman
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: University of Tartu Press 2023-12-01
Series:Interlitteraria
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/IL/article/view/23512
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author Rebekka Lotman
author_facet Rebekka Lotman
author_sort Rebekka Lotman
collection DOAJ
description During and after the Second World War, over 50,000 Estonians were sent to Soviet prison and forced labour camps. Within these camps, some of the repressed Estonians developed their own subculture – prison camp poetry, secretly written on sheets of paper and also memorised. The poems examined in the article were composed predominantly during the latter half of the 1940s and the 1950s, within various prison camps situated in the Karaganda Region, the Kazakh ASSR (Spassky), the Komi ASSR (Vorkuta, Intalag, and Ukhta), Mordovia (Dubravslag), the Gorki Oblast (Unzhlag) and the far northern camps of Kolyma and Krasnoyarsk Krai (Norilsk). The focus of this article is on the emotional depth of these poems and how they encapsulate feelings of fear and fearlessness, despair and hope, anger and sorrow, vengefulness and loathing. The article demonstrates how not succumbing to fear became a survival strategy within a regime of terror for Estonian Gulag poets, and how poetry provided diverse avenues for exploring this approach. Fear was transformed in various ways: Artur Alliksaar’s poetry confronts the possibility of cataclysm with beauty, while the lyrical selves of Valve Pillesaar, Leenart Üllaste, and Helmut Joonuks chose to shut down their minds. Venda Sõelsepp and Annus Rävälä, on the other hand, replaces his fear with sarcasm, while Enno Piir and Enn Uibo’s poems call for terror to be turned against the system itself.
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spelling doaj-art-393301ec3edd4be9b882ae0b19deccc32025-01-28T09:18:56ZdeuUniversity of Tartu PressInterlitteraria1406-07012228-47292023-12-0128210.12697/IL.2023.28.2.2Fearlessness and Resistance in the Gulag: Estonian Prison Camp PoetryRebekka Lotman0University of Tartu, Institute of Cultural Research During and after the Second World War, over 50,000 Estonians were sent to Soviet prison and forced labour camps. Within these camps, some of the repressed Estonians developed their own subculture – prison camp poetry, secretly written on sheets of paper and also memorised. The poems examined in the article were composed predominantly during the latter half of the 1940s and the 1950s, within various prison camps situated in the Karaganda Region, the Kazakh ASSR (Spassky), the Komi ASSR (Vorkuta, Intalag, and Ukhta), Mordovia (Dubravslag), the Gorki Oblast (Unzhlag) and the far northern camps of Kolyma and Krasnoyarsk Krai (Norilsk). The focus of this article is on the emotional depth of these poems and how they encapsulate feelings of fear and fearlessness, despair and hope, anger and sorrow, vengefulness and loathing. The article demonstrates how not succumbing to fear became a survival strategy within a regime of terror for Estonian Gulag poets, and how poetry provided diverse avenues for exploring this approach. Fear was transformed in various ways: Artur Alliksaar’s poetry confronts the possibility of cataclysm with beauty, while the lyrical selves of Valve Pillesaar, Leenart Üllaste, and Helmut Joonuks chose to shut down their minds. Venda Sõelsepp and Annus Rävälä, on the other hand, replaces his fear with sarcasm, while Enno Piir and Enn Uibo’s poems call for terror to be turned against the system itself. https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/IL/article/view/23512Estonian poetryGulag literatureprison camp poetrypoetics of resistance
spellingShingle Rebekka Lotman
Fearlessness and Resistance in the Gulag: Estonian Prison Camp Poetry
Interlitteraria
Estonian poetry
Gulag literature
prison camp poetry
poetics of resistance
title Fearlessness and Resistance in the Gulag: Estonian Prison Camp Poetry
title_full Fearlessness and Resistance in the Gulag: Estonian Prison Camp Poetry
title_fullStr Fearlessness and Resistance in the Gulag: Estonian Prison Camp Poetry
title_full_unstemmed Fearlessness and Resistance in the Gulag: Estonian Prison Camp Poetry
title_short Fearlessness and Resistance in the Gulag: Estonian Prison Camp Poetry
title_sort fearlessness and resistance in the gulag estonian prison camp poetry
topic Estonian poetry
Gulag literature
prison camp poetry
poetics of resistance
url https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/IL/article/view/23512
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