Nowherelands An atlas of vanished countries, 1840-1975

Bjørn Berge

Book - 2017

A multitude of countries that once existed have since been erased from the map. Varying vastly in size and shape, location and longevity, the fifty 'nowherelands' in this book are united by one fact: all of them endured long enough to issue their own stamps. Some of their names, such as Biafra or New Brunswick, will be relatively familiar. Others, such as Labuan, Tannu Tuva, and Inini, are far less recognizable. But all of these lost nations have stories to tell, whether they were as short-lived as Eastern Karelia, which lasted only a few weeks during the Soviet-Finnish War of 1922, or as long-lasting as the Orange Free State, a Boer Republic that celebrated fifty years as an independent state in the late 1800s. Their broad spectr...um reflects the entire history of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, with its ideologies, imperialism, waves of immigration, and conflicts both major and minor. The motifs and symbols chosen for stamps have always served as a form of national self-presentation, an expression of the aims and ambitions of the ruling authorities. Drawing on fiction and eye-witness accounts as well as historical sources, Bjorn Berge's witty text casts an unconventional eye on these lesser-known nations. Nowherelands is a different kind of history book that will intrigue anyone keen to understand what makes a nation a nation.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

909.8/Berge
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 909.8/Berge Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Atlases
Published
London ; New York, New York : Thames & Hudson 2017.
Language
English
Norwegian
Main Author
Bjørn Berge (author)
Other Authors
Lucy Moffat (translator)
Item Description
Translation of: Landene som forsvant, 1840-1970.
Color map on lining papers.
Physical Description
240 pages : illustrations (some colour), colour maps ; 18 x 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 224-236) and index.
ISBN
9780500519905
  • 1840-1860: The two Sicilies : bottomless poverty and weary aristocrats ; Heligoland : from island realm to bombing target ; New Brunswick : immigrants with the wool pulled over their eyes ; Corrientes : stamps from the bakery ; Labuan : binge-drinking in a seedy South Sea paradise ; Schleswig : Scandinavianism and martial music ; Danish West Indies : panic sale of slave islands ; Van Diemen's Land : penal colony with fearful stamps ; Elobey, Annobon and Corisco : anti-imperialism and nervous missionaries
  • 1860-1890: Obock : arms dealing and goat soup ; Boyaca : decadents at war ; Alwar : potty princes and sweet dessert ; Eastern Rumelia : drawing-board country ; Orange Free State : hymn-singing and racism ; Iquique : saltpetre war in a dusty landscape ; Bhopal : burka-clad princesses ; Sedang : from the Champs Elysées to Kon Tom ; Perak : tin on the brain
  • 1890-1915: Ile Sainte-Marie : civilized panic in a tropical Utopia ; Nandgaon : peaceful fanaticism ; Kiaochow : a capricious emperor in a rotten game ; Tierra del Fuego : dictator in gold ; Mafeking : boy scouts using diversionary tactics ; The Carolines : sea cucumbers for stone money ; The canal zone : a Siberia in the Caribbean
  • 1915-1925: Hejaz : stamps with a bitter strawberry taste ; Allenstein : a summer of independence ; Cape Juby : mail planes in the dessert ; South Russia : a white knight loses his grip ; Batum : oil fever and bluebottles ; Danzig : sponge cake with Hitler ; Far Eastern Republic : Utopians on the tundra ; Tripolitania : fascist air race in the cradle of Islamism ; Eastern Karelia : national romanticism and brooding woodland pathos ; Carnaro and fiume : poetry and fascism
  • 1925-1945: Manchukuo : at the epicentre of evil ; Inini : mortal sins in an impenetrable rainforest ; Saseno : childhood paradise in the world's most dismal place ; Tannu Tuva : closed country with eccentric stamps ; Tangier International Zone : a modern-day Sodom ; Hatay : genocide and a rigged referendum ; The Channel Islands : sabotage with stamps ; South Shetland Islands : penguins in the furnace
  • 1945-1975: Trieste : a crossroads of history ; Ryukyu : systematic suicide ; South Kasai : miserable Balubas and precious minerals ; The South Moluccas : spices and terrorism ; Biafra : famine and proxy war ; Upper Yafa : mud houses and gaudy stamps.
Review by Library Journal Review

Researcher and architect Berge treasures worn and cancelled stamps as proof of countries that existed but have disappeared. These "Nowherelands" may have become uninhabitable by disasters, been renamed after rebellions, or been carved into new territories after war. The existence of a stamp from the region is the evidence Berge required for a country's inclusion. Supplemental research is distilled into three- to five-page entries that typically feature a map, a quote, and writings that mention the territory. Stamp images are interspersed, though some are faded or heavily marked by cancellation ink. VERDICT An intriguing diversion for historians and travelers. © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.