Description

Book Synopsis

Astana, the capital city of the post-Soviet Kazakhstan, has often been admired for the design and planning of its futuristic cityscape. This anthropological study of the development of the city focuses on every-day practices, official ideologies and representations alongside the memories and dreams of the city’s longstanding residents and recent migrants. Critically examining a range of approaches to place and space in anthropology, geography and other disciplines, the book argues for an understanding of space as inextricably material-and-imaginary, and unceasingly dynamic – allowing for a plurality of incompatible pasts and futures materialized in spatial form.



Trade Review

“This book truly epitomizes twenty-first century scholarship in the social sciences. From this standpoint, despite its primary focus on a Central Asian society, it can be considered a useful reference for Europeanists in the broader sense, especially those involved in post-communist studies. As a matter of fact, the book was written in English by a Polish researcher, in a German institution, with European funding, drawing on extensive fieldwork in Kazakhstan…[It] opens stimulating debates in many field…The reader is caught in the midst of fascinating stories and compelling arguments. The structure allows us to grasp multiple times, plural spaces, thus numerous modernities.” • EuropeNow

“Laszczkowski offers a rich and dynamic picture of migration, identification, alienation and change behind seemingly straight lines of plans, streets and buildings.” • Allegra lab

“The book can serve as the perfect companion to post-graduate studies in many fields, because its methodology is brilliant, clear, transparent, and utterly reflexive. No doubt it will become a major reference text on many syllabi to come.” • Central Asian Affairs

City of the Future represents a particularly remarkable achievement not only in its sophisticated consideration of [its] sources and the fascinating dialogues into which it brings them, but equally in how Laszczkowski skillfully grounds them within the open-ended ambivalences that his sharp ethnographic eye brings to light with impressive lucidity… the book could come in handy as a clear, concise, and critical ethnographic exposition of crucial theoretical debates and indispensable literature that would no doubt serve well in advanced undergraduate as well as graduate courses in urban anthropology.” • Slavic Review

“Drawing upon the case of Astana, which remains unfamiliar to many scholars, this book makes a valuable contribution to the study of urban transformation and power in the post-Soviet countries and beyond. Despite the city representing an example of phenomena often too broad in scale to be empirically analysed, having numerous inter-subjective and experiential qualities, the book skilfully carves out the multiplicity and complexity of time- and space-making relationships. Furthermore, it introduces numerous new perspectives that should be elaborated upon by future research.” • Europe-Asia Studies

“In many ways, Laszczkowski’s observations affirm existing work, and indeed his book does a marvelous job engaging some rather complex theories in accessible terms. Yet, his ideas on spatiality are also highly original, and deserve a wide readership… Coupled with its excellent theoretical framing and wide-ranging fieldwork, [this book] is set to become a must-read not only for anthropologists, but also for any social scientist or humanities scholar concerned with how the contested notion of modernity can reach into the very pores of the urban metropolis.” • International Social Science Review

“‘City of the Future’ is the first of its kind. As a long-awaited comprehensive account of the rise of Astana… it is a remarkably thoughtful and thought-provoking book. Laszczkowski is a skilled ethnographer and he recounts his rich and insightful research in a style that captivates and challenges readers to think outside the box.” • Natalie Koch, University of Syracuse



Table of Contents

List of Maps, Figures and Tables
Acknowledgments
Note on Transliteration and Translation

Introduction: Pathways into the ‘City of the Future’

  • Astana, Kazakhstan and the Global Lives of Modernist Urbanism
  • Anthropology’s Space
  • Space and Time
  • Theorizing the City Anthropologically
  • Fieldwork in the ‘City of the Future’

Chapter 1. Materializing the Future: Images and Practices

  • Deconstruction, Reconstruction
  • The Cityscape of the Future
  • Becoming ‘Contemporary’
  • The Roots of Disenchantment, and Its Limits

Chapter 2. Performing Urbanity: Migrants, the City and Collective Identification

  • Identities beyond Representation
  • Urbanity and Rurality in Kazakhstan
  • Migration to Astana
  • Migrants’ Stories
    • Kumano: A Pioneer Settles Down
    • Kirill and Gisele: Love on the Move
    • Bakytgul: Caught Up in Deferrals
    • Aynura: The Girl Who Played the Accordion
    • Madiyar: The Struggling Southerner
  • Embodying Identity

Chapter 3. Tselinograd: The Past in the ‘City of the Future’

  • Building Tselinograd
  • Nostalgia and Spatial Intimacy
  • Walking in Tselinograd
  • Tselinograd’s Glory

Chapter 4. Celebration and the City: Belonging in Public Space

  • What Is Public Space?
  • The Setting: City Squares
  • Public Holiday Celebrations
    • ...in Late-Soviet Tselinograd
    • ...in Astana
  • Whose Celebration, Whose City?
  • Public Space Reopened

Chapter 5. Fixing the Courtyard: Mundane Place-Making

  • Shifting Frameworks
  • Material Place-Making in the Dvor
  • Digression: Things Make a Difference
  • The KSK Takeover

Chapter 6. Playing with the City: ‘Encounter’ in Astana

  • What is ‘Encounter’?
  • Game Types
  • ‘Encounter’ as Play
  • Play or Politics: Carnival, Stiob and ‘Encounter’
  • ‘Encounter’s Creativity'
  • Creasing Space

Conclusion

References
Index

'City of the Future': Built Space, Modernity and

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    A Paperback / softback by Mateusz Laszczkowski

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      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 07/10/2018
      ISBN13: 9781789200751, 978-1789200751
      ISBN10: 178920075X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Astana, the capital city of the post-Soviet Kazakhstan, has often been admired for the design and planning of its futuristic cityscape. This anthropological study of the development of the city focuses on every-day practices, official ideologies and representations alongside the memories and dreams of the city’s longstanding residents and recent migrants. Critically examining a range of approaches to place and space in anthropology, geography and other disciplines, the book argues for an understanding of space as inextricably material-and-imaginary, and unceasingly dynamic – allowing for a plurality of incompatible pasts and futures materialized in spatial form.



      Trade Review

      “This book truly epitomizes twenty-first century scholarship in the social sciences. From this standpoint, despite its primary focus on a Central Asian society, it can be considered a useful reference for Europeanists in the broader sense, especially those involved in post-communist studies. As a matter of fact, the book was written in English by a Polish researcher, in a German institution, with European funding, drawing on extensive fieldwork in Kazakhstan…[It] opens stimulating debates in many field…The reader is caught in the midst of fascinating stories and compelling arguments. The structure allows us to grasp multiple times, plural spaces, thus numerous modernities.” • EuropeNow

      “Laszczkowski offers a rich and dynamic picture of migration, identification, alienation and change behind seemingly straight lines of plans, streets and buildings.” • Allegra lab

      “The book can serve as the perfect companion to post-graduate studies in many fields, because its methodology is brilliant, clear, transparent, and utterly reflexive. No doubt it will become a major reference text on many syllabi to come.” • Central Asian Affairs

      City of the Future represents a particularly remarkable achievement not only in its sophisticated consideration of [its] sources and the fascinating dialogues into which it brings them, but equally in how Laszczkowski skillfully grounds them within the open-ended ambivalences that his sharp ethnographic eye brings to light with impressive lucidity… the book could come in handy as a clear, concise, and critical ethnographic exposition of crucial theoretical debates and indispensable literature that would no doubt serve well in advanced undergraduate as well as graduate courses in urban anthropology.” • Slavic Review

      “Drawing upon the case of Astana, which remains unfamiliar to many scholars, this book makes a valuable contribution to the study of urban transformation and power in the post-Soviet countries and beyond. Despite the city representing an example of phenomena often too broad in scale to be empirically analysed, having numerous inter-subjective and experiential qualities, the book skilfully carves out the multiplicity and complexity of time- and space-making relationships. Furthermore, it introduces numerous new perspectives that should be elaborated upon by future research.” • Europe-Asia Studies

      “In many ways, Laszczkowski’s observations affirm existing work, and indeed his book does a marvelous job engaging some rather complex theories in accessible terms. Yet, his ideas on spatiality are also highly original, and deserve a wide readership… Coupled with its excellent theoretical framing and wide-ranging fieldwork, [this book] is set to become a must-read not only for anthropologists, but also for any social scientist or humanities scholar concerned with how the contested notion of modernity can reach into the very pores of the urban metropolis.” • International Social Science Review

      “‘City of the Future’ is the first of its kind. As a long-awaited comprehensive account of the rise of Astana… it is a remarkably thoughtful and thought-provoking book. Laszczkowski is a skilled ethnographer and he recounts his rich and insightful research in a style that captivates and challenges readers to think outside the box.” • Natalie Koch, University of Syracuse



      Table of Contents

      List of Maps, Figures and Tables
      Acknowledgments
      Note on Transliteration and Translation

      Introduction: Pathways into the ‘City of the Future’

      • Astana, Kazakhstan and the Global Lives of Modernist Urbanism
      • Anthropology’s Space
      • Space and Time
      • Theorizing the City Anthropologically
      • Fieldwork in the ‘City of the Future’

      Chapter 1. Materializing the Future: Images and Practices

      • Deconstruction, Reconstruction
      • The Cityscape of the Future
      • Becoming ‘Contemporary’
      • The Roots of Disenchantment, and Its Limits

      Chapter 2. Performing Urbanity: Migrants, the City and Collective Identification

      • Identities beyond Representation
      • Urbanity and Rurality in Kazakhstan
      • Migration to Astana
      • Migrants’ Stories
        • Kumano: A Pioneer Settles Down
        • Kirill and Gisele: Love on the Move
        • Bakytgul: Caught Up in Deferrals
        • Aynura: The Girl Who Played the Accordion
        • Madiyar: The Struggling Southerner
      • Embodying Identity

      Chapter 3. Tselinograd: The Past in the ‘City of the Future’

      • Building Tselinograd
      • Nostalgia and Spatial Intimacy
      • Walking in Tselinograd
      • Tselinograd’s Glory

      Chapter 4. Celebration and the City: Belonging in Public Space

      • What Is Public Space?
      • The Setting: City Squares
      • Public Holiday Celebrations
        • ...in Late-Soviet Tselinograd
        • ...in Astana
      • Whose Celebration, Whose City?
      • Public Space Reopened

      Chapter 5. Fixing the Courtyard: Mundane Place-Making

      • Shifting Frameworks
      • Material Place-Making in the Dvor
      • Digression: Things Make a Difference
      • The KSK Takeover

      Chapter 6. Playing with the City: ‘Encounter’ in Astana

      • What is ‘Encounter’?
      • Game Types
      • ‘Encounter’ as Play
      • Play or Politics: Carnival, Stiob and ‘Encounter’
      • ‘Encounter’s Creativity'
      • Creasing Space

      Conclusion

      References
      Index

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