Description

Book Synopsis
Drawing on interviews with a cross-section of Muscovites, this study recounts how people made sense of the acute uncertainties of everyday life. It describes the identities and competencies that emerged in response to these challenges in various domains, from consumption and daily rhetoric to urban geography and health care.

Trade Review

[This] book is a must-read for anyone with an interest in postcommunist transition and its effect on day-to-day living. It will also be a great resource in undergraduate classes on market transitions, contemporary Russia and consumption.

* Contemporary Sociology *

[Shevchenko's] fascinating and insightful survey shows how the ethnographical approach may cast new light on social and economic stakes in Russia, and highlights the role of cultural categories in times of large-scale social change.

* Europe-Asia Studies *

This fascinating and elegantly written book will be of tremendous interest and use to scholars of Soviet/post-Soviet societies, particularly in the fields of sociology, anthropology, and cultural studies. . . . The accessibility of Shevchenko's writing will make this book useful for both undergraduate and graduate courses. 69.3, July 2010

* The Russian Review *

. . . a sweeping panorama of everyday life that covers work, leisure, private life, and public (dis)engagement in postsoviet Russia.46 2009

-- D.N. Shalin * University of Nevada *

Olga Shevchenko's book leaves us with tools and a template for rigorous qualitative research that can benefit research in a wide range of cases of profound transformations. Vol.115.5 March 2010

-- Balazs Vedres * Central European University *

[A]n innovative contribution to the sociological study of quotidian life, alas not life under ordinary cir- cumstances. Shevchenko s book stretches beyond micro-sociological concerns towards fuller understanding of broad concepts such as social change, crisis and normality. The book is an ambitious effort to apprehend the sociological relationship between crisis and normality in the dramatic decade of change that followed communism's collapse. . . . [A]n illuminating, engaging contribution . . . .

* Social Forces *

Shevchenko's work is timely and should be of interest to anyone concerned with the nature and consequences of economic and social change as well as those with a curiosity for all things Russian.Vol. 89.1, January 2011

* Slavonic and East European Reivew *

Olga Shevchenko's Crisis and the Everyday in Postsocialist Moscow sets a very high standard of scholarship. A thoughtful, innovative and thought-provoking study, this book gives important insights into what proved to be one of the most dramatic episodes in Russia's recent history. . . . This book is an invaluable contribution to the study of contemporary Russia, with its mulitple paradoxes and contradictions. Vol. 5.1, 2010

* Cultural Sociology *

Table of Contents

Contents
Acknowledgments

1. Introduction: Living on a Volcano
2. How the Crisis of Socialism Became a Postsocialist Crisis
3. A State of Emergency: The Lived Experience of Postsocialist Decline
4. The Routinization of Crisis, or On the Permanence of Temporary Conditions
5. Permanent Crisis, Durable Goods
6. Building Autonomy in Everyday Life
7. What Changes When Life Stands Still
8. Conclusion

Appendix 1. Methodology
Appendix 2. List of Respondents
Appendix 3. List of Interviewed Experts
Appendix 4. Discussion Topics
Notes
Works Cited
Index

Crisis and the Everyday in Postsocialist Moscow

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Fri 26 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Olga Shevchenko

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      View other formats and editions of Crisis and the Everyday in Postsocialist Moscow by Olga Shevchenko

      Publisher: MH - Indiana University Press
      Publication Date: 12/17/2008 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780253220288, 978-0253220288
      ISBN10: 0253220289

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Drawing on interviews with a cross-section of Muscovites, this study recounts how people made sense of the acute uncertainties of everyday life. It describes the identities and competencies that emerged in response to these challenges in various domains, from consumption and daily rhetoric to urban geography and health care.

      Trade Review

      [This] book is a must-read for anyone with an interest in postcommunist transition and its effect on day-to-day living. It will also be a great resource in undergraduate classes on market transitions, contemporary Russia and consumption.

      * Contemporary Sociology *

      [Shevchenko's] fascinating and insightful survey shows how the ethnographical approach may cast new light on social and economic stakes in Russia, and highlights the role of cultural categories in times of large-scale social change.

      * Europe-Asia Studies *

      This fascinating and elegantly written book will be of tremendous interest and use to scholars of Soviet/post-Soviet societies, particularly in the fields of sociology, anthropology, and cultural studies. . . . The accessibility of Shevchenko's writing will make this book useful for both undergraduate and graduate courses. 69.3, July 2010

      * The Russian Review *

      . . . a sweeping panorama of everyday life that covers work, leisure, private life, and public (dis)engagement in postsoviet Russia.46 2009

      -- D.N. Shalin * University of Nevada *

      Olga Shevchenko's book leaves us with tools and a template for rigorous qualitative research that can benefit research in a wide range of cases of profound transformations. Vol.115.5 March 2010

      -- Balazs Vedres * Central European University *

      [A]n innovative contribution to the sociological study of quotidian life, alas not life under ordinary cir- cumstances. Shevchenko s book stretches beyond micro-sociological concerns towards fuller understanding of broad concepts such as social change, crisis and normality. The book is an ambitious effort to apprehend the sociological relationship between crisis and normality in the dramatic decade of change that followed communism's collapse. . . . [A]n illuminating, engaging contribution . . . .

      * Social Forces *

      Shevchenko's work is timely and should be of interest to anyone concerned with the nature and consequences of economic and social change as well as those with a curiosity for all things Russian.Vol. 89.1, January 2011

      * Slavonic and East European Reivew *

      Olga Shevchenko's Crisis and the Everyday in Postsocialist Moscow sets a very high standard of scholarship. A thoughtful, innovative and thought-provoking study, this book gives important insights into what proved to be one of the most dramatic episodes in Russia's recent history. . . . This book is an invaluable contribution to the study of contemporary Russia, with its mulitple paradoxes and contradictions. Vol. 5.1, 2010

      * Cultural Sociology *

      Table of Contents

      Contents
      Acknowledgments

      1. Introduction: Living on a Volcano
      2. How the Crisis of Socialism Became a Postsocialist Crisis
      3. A State of Emergency: The Lived Experience of Postsocialist Decline
      4. The Routinization of Crisis, or On the Permanence of Temporary Conditions
      5. Permanent Crisis, Durable Goods
      6. Building Autonomy in Everyday Life
      7. What Changes When Life Stands Still
      8. Conclusion

      Appendix 1. Methodology
      Appendix 2. List of Respondents
      Appendix 3. List of Interviewed Experts
      Appendix 4. Discussion Topics
      Notes
      Works Cited
      Index

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