2020, Publikationen

Thomas Lahusen and Schamma Schahadat (eds.) (2020): Postsocialist Landscapes. Real and Imaginary Spaces from Stalinstadt to Pyongyang, transcript: Bielefeld.

Since the fall of the Iron Curtain, formerly socialist countries have gone through manifold transformations, whilst remnants of socialism remain ubiquitous. The volume explores various spaces of the postsocialist landscape, presenting a mixture of real and imaginary spaces, of memory and nostalgia, of aesthetic and political symbolism, of the global East and the global South, of academic and essayistic writing. It casts a glance at the heterogeneous relics of socialism and their transformation in very different parts of the world. From the description of (post-)socialist interiors, façades, neighborhoods, parks, monuments, and objects towards the imaginary spaces of literature, the contributors describe the concreteness and intimacy of some of the places that span across and even beyond of what is left of the »second world« today.

Kapitel-Übersicht

  1. Frontmatter

    Seiten 1 – 4

  2. Contents

    Seiten 5 – 6

  3. Introduction

    Seiten 7 – 22

  4. Part 1: History’s Playground

    The Ideological Park: How the Tsar’s Garden in Kyiv Became a Modern Political Space

    Seiten 25 – 46

  5. The Last Soviet City

    Seiten 47 – 66

  6. Spaces of Detachment

    Seiten 67 – 92

  7. Part 2: Friendship of the Peoples?

    Contemporary Ukrainian Russian-Language Poetry and Post-Soviet Literary Space

    Seiten 95 – 116

  8. (Re)Inventing (East) Central Europe: Literary Expeditions into a Lost Space

    Seiten 117 – 142

  9. Postsocialist Hybridities: Finding a Place in Kyrgyzstan

    Seiten 143 – 160

  10. Space under Siege. Sarajevo during and after the War

    Seiten 161 – 180

  11. Part 3: „Minus Stalin“

    The Limits of Central Planning: Rudimentary Town Centers in the Planned Cities of Stalinstadt and Sztálinváros

    Seiten 183 – 204

  12. Neighborhood Socialism: A Memoir from 1960s Sofia

    Seiten 205 – 216

  13. Mourning the Microrayon: An Essay in Affective Geography

    Seiten 217 – 234

  14. (Re)Mapping National Space: The One Hundred Tourist Sites of Bulgaria and Their Metamorphoses

    Seiten 235 – 252

  15. Part 4: Traveling Boundaries

    The Monument de la Renaissance africaine and Global Routes of (Socialist) Monumentalism: New York, Moscow, Pyongyang, Dakar

    Seiten 255 – 280

  16. The Gendered Anxieties of Apartment Living in North Korea, 1953-65

    Seiten 281 – 304

  17. Unreal Estate: Postsocialist China’s Dystopic Dreamscapes

    Seiten 305 – 320

  18. Authors

    Seiten 321 – 328