Fr. 170.00

Post-Communist Nostalgia

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext “…the term ‘post-communist nostalgia’ will continue to be used, abused, and debated. However, this illuminating book shows that the term evokes multiple phenomena that have arisen, and will continue to arise.” • Pol-Int “This book serves an invaluable function by capturing the rich complexity of nostalgia and marking a moment when questions of postmodern historiography can be applied to a past, the recent Communist one, for which the pressures toward absolute evaluations are immense. [It] summarizes some of the scholarship that one might include with the "contemporary history" of the region…This volume should have broad general appeal across a market for post-Communist cultural studies and the study of memory.” • H-Habsburg “Overall, this an impressive set of essays that makes a weighty contribution to the study of nostalgia in the European East after socialism. It adds significantly to the burgeoning literature on the infinitely complex and fascinating subject of social remembrance… Scholars and students interested in how memory works (and fails) will find much to appreciate in Post-Communist Nostalgia .” • Anthropology of East Europe Review “The volume is refreshingly iconoclastic… its overall character is kaleidoscopic but all the more fascinating and insightful.” • Südosteuropa “This volume nicely illustrates that nostalgia talk is symptomatic of ongoing struggles over the ‘truths’ of postsocialist history… [It]makes an important ethnographic and theoretical contribution to memory, history, and identity studies in the region and beyond. By exploring the complex and often unpredictable social life of socialism in the realm of memory (Berdahl), it illustrates that sometimes, as Todorova claims, it can be very hard to predict what our pasts are going to be.” • Slavic Review “These lively essays make for the rare collection that is greater than the sum of its parts. Bookended by a substantive Foreword and Afterword, they upend the standard ‘diagnosis of nostalgia’ found across the former Soviet bloc, refuting the popular conception that Eastern Europeans are somehow haunted by the past, and illustrating the repertoire of contemporary post-socialist cultural politics at its most sophisticated.” • Bruce Grant , New York University Informationen zum Autor Maria Todorova is Professor of History at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Her publications include Bones of Contention: The Living Archive of Vasil Levski and the Making of Bulgaria’s National Hero (2006), Balkan Identities: Nation and Memory (2004), Imagining the Balkans (1997), Balkan Family Structure and the European Pattern: Demographic Developments in Ottoman Bulgaria (1993). Zsuzsa Gille is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She is the author of From the Cult of Waste to the Trash Heap of History: The Politics of Waste in Socialist and Post-Socialist Hungary (2007), and co-author of Global Ethnography: Forces, Connections and Imaginations in a Postmodern World (2000). Klappentext Although the end of the Cold War was greeted with great enthusiasm by people in the East and the West, the ensuing social and especially economic changes did not always result in the hoped-for improvements in people's lives. This led to widespread disillusionment that can be observed today all across Eastern Europe. Not simply a longing for security, stability, and prosperity, this nostalgia is also a sense of loss regarding a specific form of sociability. Even some of those who opposed communism express a desire to invest their new lives with renewed meaning and dignity. Among the younger generation, it ...

Product details

Authors Maria Gille Todorova
Assisted by Zsuzsa Gille (Editor), Gille Zsuzsa (Editor), Maria Todorova (Editor), Todorova Maria (Editor)
Publisher BERGHAHN BOOKS, INC
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.06.2010
 
EAN 9781845456719
ISBN 978-1-84545-671-9
No. of pages 310
Dimensions 158 mm x 163 mm x 20 mm
Subjects Humanities, art, music > History > Regional and national histories
Non-fiction book

Eastern Europe, European History, HISTORY / Social History, HISTORY / Europe / Eastern, 21st Century, 21st century history: from c 2000 -, 21st century, c 2000 to c 2100, Social and cultural history, c 1990 to c 2000, c 1990 to c 1999, History: 20th Century to Present, Memory Studies

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