Anna M. Kerttula, an anthropologist, offers a vivid portrayal of life in
Sireniki, a Siberian village on the Bering Sea. Once a traditional
Yup'ik community, it was by the final years of the Soviet Empire home to
three cultural groups: the Yup'ik, native hunters of sea mammals; the
Chukchi, nomadic reindeer herders who had been required by the state to
turn their animals over to cooperative farms; and Russians of European
ancestry enticed to the region by incentive programs designed to
colonize the Russian Far East. Kerttula, who lived among the villagers
for eighteen months, draws on her experiences to explore how each
group's beliefs and customs have transformed those of the other two. Her
book shows the endurance of the indigenous cultures of Far Eastern
Russia despite years of intrusion by the Soviet state.The author
describes in rich detail how the Yup'ik, the Chukchi, and the Russian
"newcomers" developed a sense of cultural difference because of their
separate symbolic systems and yet cohered as a community. She explains
that relations among the groups have become tenuous since the breakup of
the Soviet Union and the subsequent collapse of the local economy.
Kerttula's research provides a unique perspective on today's ethnic
rivalries within the former USSR. She maintains that these conflicts,
not always expressions of ancient animosities, may be efforts toward
mutual understanding during times of economic and social change.