The Future of Hiding
Secrecy, Infrastructure, and Ecological Memory in Estonia's Siberia
Abstract
The Future of Hiding analyzes the territorial dimensions of secrecy and how concealment occurs in relation to energy infrastructure and identity politics in eastern Estonia. It shows that secrets and hiding places are intrinsic to human affairs, while reconsidering the possibilities of relating ethnographically to what appears to be the extraneous. Francisco Martínez highlights how basements, garages, bunkers, holes, and cottages favor alternative forms of sociality, allowing local residents to redesign the terms of their public selves. Shadow spaces in this liminal region, at the border with Russia, are created against the institutional demand to be knowable. People engage in ordinary forms of ambivalence and refusal to negotiate a sense of loss and the consequences of a century of extractive activities. The Future of Hiding invites cross-disciplinary dialogue on topics like mining, transparency, belonging and cultural landscapes, offering insights into infrastructure's reproduction and destruction, recolonizations, and the ecological memory of a sacrificed area.
Keywords
Secrecy in modern societies, Russian minority in Europe, Mining legacies and Soviet infrastructure, Shadow spaces and negative geographies, Limits of belonging to the nation stateISBN
9781501784286, 9781501784286, 9781501784279, 9781501784262, 9781501784255Publisher
Cornell University PressPublisher website
https://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/Publication date and place
Ithaca, 2025Imprint
Cornell University PressSeries
Expertise: Cultures and Technologies of Knowledge,Classification
Social and cultural anthropology
Central / national / federal government policies
Politics and government


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