Title Lietuvių tautos delokalizacijos trauma
Translation of Title The trauma of de-localization of the Lithuanian nation.
Authors Laurėnas, Vaidutis
DOI 10.15181/tbb.v72i3.1163
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Is Part of Tiltai : socialiniai mokslai.. Klaipėda : Klaipėdos universiteto leidykla. 2015, Nr. 3 (72), p. 1-23.. ISSN 1392-3137. eISSN 2351-6569
Keywords [eng] Lithuanian nation ; nationalism ; the end of post-communism ; “One’s own state” ; delocalisation of a nation ; transnational networking agent of Lithuaniannism
Abstract [eng] The paper develops the insights laid out in the chapter The Trauma of Nation’s De-localisation in the book Dramaturgy of National Identity (2005). In the contemporary world, delocalisation of nations is unavoidable and, in that sense, it represents a natural process of civilisation which reproduces national identity in a transnational form both in the country of emigration and of origin. However, for the nations with an incomplete story of territorial consolidation, the opening up to supra-nationalisation, emigration, and globalisation in general was unexpected and seemed infinite and destructive for the nation. The Lithuanian nation was affected by delocalisation, among other things, primarily by especially large-scale emigration. The nation is losing the feeling of integrity. Just 25 years ago, the ideal of the localisation of the nation – its concentration on a sovereign territory – prevailed. Global life economization, European supra-nationalization, and the failure to successfully complete the postcommunist transformation dealt a blow to the national ideal that actualised “one’s own state“. The “breaking up” of the nation was so unexpected that even nationalism did not actualise ethnocentrism. It was expected to be just temporary costs of post-communist transformation. However, presently, we have increasingly more arguments to prove that the post-communist transitional period has expired, therefore, the current trends have long-term prospects. The de-localization of the Lithuanian nation takes place not really as a natural process of civilisation, but rather as a response to the mainly unsuccessful end of post-communism in Lithuania. The situation is to be characterised by the metaphor of trauma. [...].
Published Klaipėda : Klaipėdos universiteto leidykla
Type Journal article
Language Lithuanian
Publication date 2015
CC license CC license description