After Utopia

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activist strategies in post-Soviet societies
Antifascist Struggle
Archiving Efforts
ASW
Balkan Route
Border Struggles
Category=JHM
Category=JPFF
Civil Society
Collective Care
Eastern European ethnography
Electric Yerevan
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EU Border Regime
EU Turkey Deal
feminist praxis research
intersectional political analysis
Karabakh Movement
Late Socialism
Leftist Activists
Nagorno Karabakh
neoliberal governance critique
NGO Sector
Non-violent Resistance
Ongoing Refugee Crisis
Political Work
Post-socialist Spaces
postsocialist activism
Postsocialist World
Postwar Privatization
Serzh Sargsyan
Southern Serbia
transnational social movements
Ukrainian Maidan
Yugoslav Socialism

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367712396
  • Weight: 394g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Nov 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This collection examines how the loss of state socialism as a world-making project and the subsequent failures of postsocialist "civil society building" have impacted new generations of progressive, antinationalist, anarchist, and social-justice oriented activists.

How do the histories of state socialism come to shape activist thinking and practice in Eastern Europe and the Caucasus? What kinds of political work can and does emerge out of this 30-year-long experience of political, social, and economic transformation? Understanding postsocialism as an intersectional experience and a geopolitically sensitive form of knowledge, this collection of essays seeks to render visible the forms of political activism in the region that are not tied to, or fully determined by, specific moments of street protest and public interruption.

Instead, the contributors examine forms of activist effort that endure in the aftermath of protest movements and in the course of lingering crises, in order to capture how our interlocutors seek to enact their desired futures under the conditions of intensifying and shape-shifting pressures of neoliberal governance. The ethnographies that span from Armenia to Ukraine, to Bosnia-Herzegovina to the newly emerging transnational Balkan route that refugees and migrants have created, illuminate how local activists engage with and/or disengage from their socialist inheritance of political imaginaries differently and imagine different futures. Our collection argues for a need for a careful, theoretically nuanced and context-specific analysis across the uneven political landscapes of the former socialist world.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of History and Anthropology.

Larisa Kurtović is a political anthropologist who conducts research on activist politics, postsocialist transformation and the aftermath of international intervention in postwar Bosnia. She is currently Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Ottawa, Canada.

Nelli Sargsyan, as a feminist, situates herself at the disciplinary intersections of political anthropology, queer studies, and critical race studies, among others. Most recently she has been interested in political work that cultivates feminist consciousness and collective care, whether it be through direct street action, public performance, or feminist fabulation.