The recent history of post-Soviet societies is often described in terms of the transition metaphor. Images of movement as well as changing places and situations were foundational for the social conceptualization of the new nations. The idea of looking for novelty and new beginnings legitimized the dissolution of the USSR as well as many state- and economy-related experiments. This volume describes how the new societies survived this period of regime change, economic crises, internal wars, political drawbacks, and social innovations, and how they are making sense of it.
The volume’s contributors include Russian, Ukrainian, and German scholars who analyze political, social, and cultural ideologies: Natalia Koulinka, Kostiantyn Fedorenko, Pavel Skigin, Jesko Schmoller, Valentyna Kyselova, Anton Avksentiev, Chris Monday, Egor Isaev, Oleksandr Zabirko, Sergiy Kurbatov, Alla Marchenko, Jennifer J. Carroll, Daria Goriacheva, and Darya Malyutina.
Mykhailo Minakov
Dr. Mikhail (Mykhailo) Minakov has been a Senior Advisor at the Kennan Institute of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, DC, since 2017. He is a prominent Ukrainian philosopher and empirical investigator who taught and researched, for over twenty years, at various universities in Ukraine, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, and the United States. Working between Kyiv, Washington and Milan, Minakov specializes in political and social theory, international development, as well as the history of modernity. He is editor-in-chief of the peer-reviewed Ideology and Politics Journal published by the Good Politics Foundation in Kyiv. He also edits the Kennan Focus Ukraine blog, and philosophical web portal Koinè. Minakov is the author or co-author of twelve books as well as numerous articles in philosophy, politics, and history.
Alexander Etkind
Dr. Alexander Etkind is Professor of History at the European University Institute at Florence, and taught at King’s College Cambridge. He is author of Eros of the Impossible (Westview 1996), Internal Colonization (Polity 2011), Warped Mourning (Stanford UP 2013), Roads not Taken (Pittsburgh UP 2017), and Remembering Katyn (Polity 2012) as well as co-editor of Memory and Theory in Eastern Europe (Palgrave 2013) and Cultural Forms of Protest in Russia (Routledge 2017).
Jennifer J Carroll
Kostiantyn Fedorenko
Daria Goriacheva
Egor Isaev
Natalia Koulinka
Sergiy Kurbatov
Valentyna Kyselova
Darya Malyutina
Alla Marchenko
Chris Monday
Jesko Schmoller
Pavel Skigin
Oleksandr Zabirko
Oleksandr Zabirko arbeitet als Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter am Seminar für Slavistik der Ruhr-Universität Bochum und promoviert im Graduiertenkolleg „Literarische Form“ der Westfälischen Wilhelms-Universität Münster. Zu seinen Forschungsschwerpunkten gehören Gegenwartsliteraturen Russlands und der Ukraine, Literaturgeschichte sowie Rechtskultur und politische Kultur im postsowjetischen Raum.
Anton Avksentiev
| Delivery time | Delivery time 2-3 working days. |
| Edited by | Mykhailo Minakov , Alexander Etkind |
|---|
| Contributions by | Jennifer J Carroll , Kostiantyn Fedorenko , Daria Goriacheva , Egor Isaev , Natalia Koulinka , Sergiy Kurbatov , Valentyna Kyselova , Darya Malyutina , Alla Marchenko , Chris Monday , Jesko Schmoller , Pavel Skigin , Oleksandr Zabirko , Anton Avksentiev |
| Number of Pages | 420 |
| e-book DRM | Digital Rights Management - Watermark |
| Publication date | 25.03.2020 |
| Type | E-Book |
| Language | English |
| E-book format | EPUB |
| ISBN | 978-3-8382-9187-1 |
| Product safety information (EU GPSR) | read more |
"How to make sense of the ideological imagination of the societies born out of the collapse of Soviet ideology, is the central question of this volume of original and highly nuanced articles edited by two of the best scholars of the post-Soviet condition."—Ivan Krastev, Centre for Liberal Strategies
"Ideology after Union is a remarkable collection of essays dedicated to the interrelation of state, society, and culture in the post-Soviet space. The case studies reach out well beyond their individual scope and paradigmatically analyze the political uses of ideological discourses."—Ulrich Schmid, University of St. Gallen
"Alexander Etkind and Mikhail Minakov have assembled a first-rate collection of scholars, who have written stimulating and original essays on the politics of post-communist societies in Europe and Central Asia."—Rajan Menon, City University of New York
"'The best in post-Soviet thought and analysis' would probably not sound too pretentious as a characteristic of this collection of twelve essays, written by authors coming from the newly independent countries of the former Soviet Union. Published originally in one of the most innovative social sciences journals of the region, the essays document, assess, and contextualize the process in which the elites and societies of the post-Soviet states emerge from the shadow of the common political and ideological legacy to chart their own course in the world that rapidly changes around them. This anthology is as much about the understandings of history as it is about the visions of the present and the future, and is a must-read for anyone interested in the region."—Serhii Plokhy, Harvard University