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Celebrating 16 Years of Independent Publishing Last updated: August 19th, 2010


POST-COMMUNIST NOSTALGIA

Edited by Maria Todorova and Zsuzsa Gille


264 pages, 5 ills, bibliog., index
ISBN 978-1-84545-671-9 Hb $80.00/£48.00 Published (June 2010)
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“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

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 surfaces as a tentative yet growing curiosity about the recent past. In this volume scholars from multiple disciplines explore the various fascinating aspects of this nostalgic turn by analyzing the impact of generational clusters, the rural-urban divide, gender differences, and political orientation. They argue persuasively that this nostalgia should not be seen as a wish to restore the past, as it has otherwise been understood, but instead it should be recognized as part of a more complex healing process and an attempt to come to terms both with the communist era as well as the new inequalities of the post-communist era.

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).




Contents

List of Figures Maria Todorova - From Utopia to Propaganda and Back Rupture and the Economies of Nostalgia Dominic Boyer - From Algos to Autonomos: Nostalgic Eastern Europe as Postimperial Mania Gerald W. Creed - Strange Bedfellows: Socialist Nostalgia and Neo-Liberalism in Bulgaria Cristofer Scarboro - Today's Unseen Enthusiasm: Communist Nostalgia for Communism in the Socialist Humanist Brigadier Movement Tanja Petrović - Nostalgia for the JNA? Remembering the Army in the Former Yugoslavia Tim Pilbrow - Dignity in Transition: History, Teachers and the Nation-State in post-1989 Bulgaria Stephanie Schwandner-Sievers - Invisible-Inaudible: Albanian Memories of Socialism after the War in Kosovo Oana Popescu-Sandu - “Let's all freeze up until 2100 or so”: Nostalgic Directions in Post-communist Romania Nostalgic Realms in Word, Sound and Screen Donna Buchanan - Sonic Nostalgia: Music, Memory, and Mythography in Bulgaria, 1990-2005 Diana Georgescu - “Ceausescu Hasn’t Died”: Irony as Counter-Memory in Post-Socialist Romania Daphne Berdahl - Goodbye Lenin, Aufwiedersehen GDR: On the Social Life of Socialism Maya Nadkarni - “But it’s ours”: Nostalgia and the politics of authenticity in postsocialist Hungary Harriet Murav - Looking Back to the Bright Future: Aleksander Melikhov's Red Zion Fedja Buric - Dwelling on the Ruins of Socialist Yugoslavia: Being Bosnian by Remembering Tito Anna Szemere - The Velvet Prison in Hindsight: Artistic Discourse in Hungary in the 1990s Anke Pinkert - Vacant History, Empty Screens: Postcommunist German Films of the 1990s *** Zsuzsa Gille - Postscript

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