Artikkel keskendub diskursustele, mis on seotud riigikeelsele gümnaasiumiõppele üleminekuga senistes vene õppekeelega gümnaasiumites. Empiiriliseks ülesandeks on analüüsida teiskeelse õppega seotud positsioone venekeelsete koolide vilistlaste kogemuste põhjal. Metodoloogiliseks eesmärgiks on selgitada kvantitatiivse Q-metodoloogilise analüüsi võimalusi peamiselt kvalitatiivse diskursusanalüüsi kontekstis. Uuring põhineb Q-metodoloogilistel intervjuudel, mis viidi 2010. aastal läbi neljas piirkonnas (Tallinn, Ida-Virumaa, Tartu, Läti) vene õppekeelega gümnaasiumite vilistlaste seas (n = 42). Selgitatakse nelja riigikeelsele õppele üleminekut iseloomustavat diskursust, mis analüüsis eristusid: “keeleliste valikuvõimaluste tähtsustamine”, “rahulolu oma keeleoskuse ja integreeritusega”, “vastuseis homogeniseerimisele” ning “keeleline ja kultuuriline suletus”.
The article discusses the much-debated issue of collective identity among the Estonian Russian-speaking population from a different prism -based on representations of the past in the local Russian-language press in 2009. Assuming that representations of the past offer references for present-day identity construction, the study is aimed at revealing which identity patterns were supported and which were rejected by journalists and other speakers in the press. The analysis suggests that the "memory divide" is not only connected with WWII, as is widely believed in Estonia, but runs further down at the imaginary time-scale. Although the analysis revealed a strong prevalence of local-scale events, the mode of representations could not help to develop "own" local identities, either in a civic or emancipatory form. By the evaluation of events, actors and the stylistic means, the Russian-language press rather constructed the identity of the imperial diaspora. The existing State Integration Program aims at strengthening civic identity and activity, but it does not have a say in history politics. However, the latter is needed in order to give more space for private memories, critical reflection and the search for ways to (re)define the group in relation to space, time and other groups.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.