Dropping out of socialism: the creation of alternative spheres in the Soviet Bloc
Gespeichert in:
Weitere Verfasser: | , |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Lanham
Lexington Books
[2017]
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Literaturverzeichnis Register // Gemischte Register |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Beschreibung: | vii, 343 Seiten Illustrationen |
ISBN: | 9781498525145 |
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adam_text | DROPPING OUT OF SOCIALISM
/
: 2016
TABLE OF CONTENTS / INHALTSVERZEICHNIS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
INTRODUCTION: TO DROP OR NOT TO DROP? / JULIANE FUIRST
DROPPING OUT IN SPIRIT
THE BIOGRAPHY OF A SCANDAL : EXPERIMENTING WITH YOGA DURING ROMANIAN
LATE SOCIALISM / IRINA COSTACHE
THE IMAGINARY ELSEWHERE OF THE HIPPIES IN SOVIET ESTONIA / TERJE
TOOMISTU
ART AND MADNESS : WEAPONS OF THE MARGINAL DURING SOCIALISM IN EASTERN
EUROPE / MARIA-ALINA ASAVEI
STUDENT ACTIVISTS AND YUGOSLAVIA S ISLAMIC REVIVAL : SARAJEVO, 1970-1975
/ MADIGAN ANDREA FICHTER
INTELLECTUAL DROPPING OUT
READER QUESTIONNAIRES IN SAMIZDAT JOURNALS : WHO OWNS ALEKSANDR BLOK? /
JOSEPHINE VON ZITZEWITZ
THE SPIRIT OF PACIFISM : SOCIAL AND CULTURAL ORIGINS OF THE GRASSROOTS
PEACE MOVEMENT IN THE LATE SOVIET PERIOD / IRINA GORDEEVA
DROPPING OUT OF SOCIALISM WITH THE COMMODORE 64 : POLISH YOUTH, HOME
COMPUTERS, AND SOCIAL IDENTITIES / PATRYK WASIAK
DROPPING OUT IN STYLE
WE ALL LIVE IN A YELLOW SUBMARINE : DROPPING OUT IN A LENINGRAD
COMMUNE / JULIANE FUIRST
IGNORING DICTATORSHIP? : PUNK ROCK, SUBCULTURE, AND ENTANGLEMENT IN THE
GDR / JEFF HAYTON
UNDER ANY FORM OF GOVERNMENT, I AM PARTISAN : THE SIBERIAN UNDERGROUND
FROM ANTI-SOVIET TO NATIONAL-BOLSHEVIST PROVOCATION / EWGENIY KASAKOW
DROPPING OUT ECONOMICS
LIVING IN THE MATERIAL WORLD : MONEY IN THE SOVIET ROCK UNDERGROUND /
ANNA KAN
SOCIALISM S EMPTY PROMISE : HOUSING VACANCY AND SQUATTING IN THE GERMAN
DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC / PETER ANGUS MITCHELL
CONCLUSION: DROPPING OUT OF SOCIALISM? : A WESTERN PERSPECTIVE / JOACHIM
HAIBERLEN
BIBLIOGRAPHY
ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS
DIESES SCHRIFTSTUECK WURDE MASCHINELL ERZEUGT.
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Index
absurdity: of life, mastered through
irony, parody, withdrawal, 17; of
Necrorealists, 76-77; as Yellow
Submarine’s response to absurdity
of outside world, 185
Agamben, Giorgio, 77
Akhmatova, Anna, 65
Akvarium (band), 262
Alekseeva, Liudmila, 108-9
AlosA group (punks), 217
Anarkhiia (fanzine), 239
Anderson, Sascha, 223
Appadurai, Arjun, 43-44
‘‘Appeal to the Governments and People
of the USSR and the USA, An”:
and formation of the Trust Group,
130-31, uniqueness of, 132
“Appeal to Young America,” 134
Arbeitsgruppe Wohnungspolitik,
282, 290
Augustine, Saint, 32
Atari: as meaningful object, 161
Aune, Margarethe, 158
authenticity, 8, 12, 16, 306, 308
autonomy, 305, 312
Babe#, Coriolan, 74-76
Bajtek (magazine): divided into
sections dedicated to brands, 167;
Grzybowska computer fair sponsored
by, 165; sponsored by ZSMP, 162
B la$a, Sabin, 66-67
Banac, Ivo, 86
bards (songwriters), shaped Soviet rock
music, 241; magnitizdat and, 267
Batovrin, Sergei, 130, 143, 146-47
Beal, Becky, 18
The Beatles, 44, 180, 182, 185, 193,
198; “Let It Be,” 190; Maksim
Kapitanovskii, The Beatles are to
Blame, 144; songs of, as shorthand,
179; “Strawberry Fields Forever,”
187; The Yellow Submarine (film),
and “Yellow Submarine” (song), 184
Beauvoir, Simone de, 34
Beck, Ulrich, 142-43, 150
Bertalan, §tefan, 74-76
Besson, Tatjana, 223
Between East and West. See Trust
Group
Bivolaru, Gregorian, 23; accused
of immoral sexual practices, 31;
context for interest in yoga, 25;
correspondence held in Securitate
archives, 28; correspondence with
Western individuals and institutions,
30; granted political asylum in
Sweden, 24; as “Guru Grig,” 34-35;
327
328
Index
indicted for statutory rape, 24;
letter of, seeking erotic materials,
30-31; Securitate surveillance, 29,
35; subordination of women in
interpretation of Tantric sex, 33;
telepathic communication, 33-34;
work in Bucharest post office, 28;
yoga philosophy of, 32, 37
Block, Tom, 71
Blok, Aleksandr: commemorations of
centenary, 115; as representative
of mystical current of Russian
Symbolism, 115-16; unofficial
writers and centenary of, 107
Blok centenary (1980), 115
Blok Questionnaire (Anketa o Bloke),
114—18
body, 304, 305, 310, 311; as distinct
from physicality, 32; hippies use
of as sites of affect, 57; nudism, 32,
35, 47-48, 57; punk belief in unity
of body and attitude, 211; Tichy
re-eroticized the feminine body
through art, 73
Boltanski, Luc and Eve Chiapello,
305, 313
Bosnia and Herzegovina, 94; Sunni
Islam in, 88
Bougarel, Xavier, 86
brand communities: “Atarowcy”
and “Komodorowcy” as brand
communities, 167; C-64 scene, 163,
168; formation of, 168; groups,
formation of, 165
Bratescu, Geta, 75
Brezhnev, Leonid Nikolaevich, 42
bricolage, 6
Bucharest, 23; Institute of Architecture,
26; Municipal Library, 28
Buck, Hannsjorg, 284
Buddhism, 54, 55
Bukovskaia, Tamara, 116—17
Butler, Judith, 45-46, 48
Butyrin, Konstantin, 114, 116, 125 (n. 49)
Buxbaum, Roman, 72
CDs, 272
capitalism, 2, 12, 17-18, 44; greater
authenticity of socialism than, 8;
Polish computer scene emerged
during transition to, 166, 170, 171
Catholicism, 88, 89
Ceau§escu, Nicolae, 23, 69; “July
Theses, 64
Chasy (journal), 107, 108, 110, 111
Chernenko, Konstantin: speech about
official pop music, 234-35
Christianity: symbolism in Yellow
Submarine commune, 192; and
Siberian punk bands, 244
Chukovskii, Kornei, 114
citizenship: “non-citizenship in the
USSR, 144
Commodore: Commodore 64 as
meaningful object, 161; showing off
with the Commodore Amiga, 170
Communal Housing Organization. See
KWV
communes: as inner emigration, 185;
and quest for privacy, 186
computers (in Poland): adopted by
young people as meaningful objects,
161; clubs, state-sponsored (see
ZSMP); concern about unwelcome
domestication of, 159-61; craze, 14;
domestication of, 164; the state’s
view of, 160, 174n36
computer fairs (gieidy komputerowe),
158; could be used for swanking
(showing off), 170; origins of, 165;
in other Polish cities, 166; and
pirated software, 164; police raids
on, 166; in Wroclaw, 169. See also
Grzybowska computer fair
computer games, 165, 166
computer hackers. See hackers
computer scenes. See brand
communities
computer users (komputerowiec,
komputerowiecy): as entrepreneurs,
164, 166-67, 170; “firms of,
Index
329
163-64; monikers of, 163; typical
pattern for “dropping out” of
computer education programs,
162-63; as a “youth tribe,” 159;
concerts: of Keldriline Heli
(Tallinn), 49; apartment concerts in
Leningrad, 265; apartment concerts
in Moscow, 264-65; “café rental”
scheme for organizing, 257—58; for
CMC concerts, 259; concert tickets,
257; earliest of Leningrad groups
in Moscow, 262; first festival of
alternative and left-radical music
in Tiumen’, 239; first Novosibirsk
rock festival, 235; for Leningrad
apartment concerts, 266; for Moscow
apartment concerts, 264; Moscow
authorities tried to regulate, 263;
to Rock Club concerts, 260-61;
“sessions,” 258
consumption, 171
Contemporary Music Club (CMC): closed,
261; at Lensovet Palace of Culture, 259
cosmopolitanism: and globalization,
142; and hippie search for
alternatives to Soviet reality,
144; peace initiatives belonging
to “citizens of the world,” 150;
processes based on cosmopolitan
values, 151; of Trust Group,
“citizens of the world,” 1.41
Costinesti, 24, 34-35
counterculture: global, 2, 180; and Trust
Group, 133-34; in the West and
Soviet hippies, 42-43
Crime and Punishment (Dostoevsky), 186
“Dada in Berlin” (Die Skeptiker), 220
Dan, Cálin, 74
Dediulin, Sergei, 111
Deleuze, Gilíes and Felix Guattari, 309
Den * za Dnem (newsletter), 142
“demos”: Atari Syjff (Atari Stinks)
demo, 168; first Polish, 163; used by
traders at fairs, 169
Diagileva, Iana “Ianka,” 235, 242
Dialog, 108, 111, 114, 116
Dimitrova, Blaga, 68
dissidents: Bosnian Muslim activists as,
86; compared with unofficial writers,
119; Islamic and state, conflict
between, 86; as a protest culture, 3
Doverie (newsletter), 142
Dragomoshchenko, Arkadii, 110
drugs, 41, 53-54, 61n57, 135
Dubin, Boris, 120
East Berlin: differences in local
authorities approaches to squatting
in, 292-93; Erlöserkirche, 217;
and GDR’s avant-garde, 285;
Kommunale Wohnungsverwaltung
(KWV) of, 278; Kulturpark, 216;
Prenzlauer Berg, 14, 222; squatting
in, EP Gallery, 286
education: Gazi Husrev-bey madrassa,
history and mission of, 87-88;
religious, 88
Eigensinn, 7, 9
Eliade, Mircea, 28 32
emotions, 8, 14, 17; Beatles’ songs
as shorthand for, 179; distinctive
emotional style as core element
of Soviet hippies, 47; emotional
investment and the Soviet ideal, 13; fear
of war part of Soviet experience, 130
Erotica, distribution of by Bivolaru’s
followers, 34; in Miroslav Tichy’s
photographs, 73-74
Erl’, Vladimir, 114
Estonia, as Soviet West, 42; known for
its rock scene, 43, 49
Evola, Julius, 32
FDJ (Freie Deutsche Jugend), 207, 210,
213, 220
Fanzines, 255
Fitzpatrick, Sheila, 80n2
Foucault, Michel, 45, 70, 78, 79, 119,
304, 307, 313-14
330
Index
Fourth of July Concert. See Leningrad,
riot of rock lovers
Frazer, James George, 55
Free Initiative: and local peace
movement, 130; founding, 134
Friendship and Dialogue: formed by
scientific sector of Trust Group, 142.
See also Trust Group, offshoots of
Fulbrook, Mary, 278
Fürst, Juliane, 47
GDR (German Democratic Republic),
207; banned and cult status of
Ost-Berlin: Leben vor der Mauerfall
in, 279; housing shortage in, 277,
281, 292; “parallel society,” in, 285;
right to housing, 278, 295
GrOb (Grazhdanskaia Oborona):
dissolved, 243; Posev became,
234; provocation, 235-36; reunion
announced, 243; songs of well
known, 242. See also Letov, Igor
Galanskov, Iurii, 129-30
Galenza, Ronald, 223, 286
Gätaia Psychiatric Hospital (Timi§,
Romania), 69-70
Giddens, Anthony, 142
Göde, Mike, 219
The Golden Calf (Ilf and Petrov), 186
Goricheva, Tat’iana: emigration and KBG
harassment of, 111. See also Chasy
Götze, Moritz, 207, 221
Grach, Vsevolod, 261, 266, 269-70
Gramsci, Antonio, 5
grassroots (local) peace movement, 130,
136, 140, 143, 150
Grebenshchikov, Boris, I21n5, 258,
265, 268
Gregg, Melissa, 47
Grigorescu, Ion, 66
Gröschner, Annett, 279
Group for Establishing Trust between
the USSSR and the USA (Group for
Establishing Trust between East and
West). See Trust Group
Groys, Boris, 110, 246
Grzybowska computer fair: origins of,
165, as site for social interaction,
165-66
Gyôrgy, Péter, 65
hackers, 2, 11, 161, 163, 164, 169
Haddon, Leslie, 164
Hair (artists’ group), 147; participation
in art exhibition of September 1975
at the VDNKH House of Culture,
149-50
Hammer, Ferenc, 171
Hare Krishna movement, 54, 61n60.
See also Pinyayev, Anatoli
Halegan, Gabriela, 69
Hauswald, Harald and Lutz Rathenow,
279
Havemeister, Heinz, 223
Havrankova, Milota, 68-69
Hebdige, Dick, 6, 46
hippies: as aesthetic not ideological
problem, 57; burden of “negative
freedom” and need for positive
ideals, 144; classed as “negative-
decadent youths” in GDR, 215;
commune in Subotica, Serbia, 89;
as a community of shared affect,
47; as core membership of Free
Initiative, 134; hippie movement
in Romania, 36; hippie-Tolstoyans,
149; manifesto ‘There is No Turning
Back,” 136; mass conversion to
Christianity, 155n76; meanings of
peace sign for, 147^4-8; mistrusted
Trust Group, 147; opposed Soviet
norms, 45; pacifism of, 148; pacifist
protests of, 130; participation in
the grassroots peace movement,
143; persecuted as peace activists,
136; religious search of, 54; Soviet
context and, 46; in the Soviet Union
and Soviet Estonia, trajectory of,
42-43, 44; terms “hippie” and
“hippie movement,” use of, 58n3;
Index
331
Yellow Submarine commune and,
191. See also sistema
Homo Sovieticus, 46
Honecker, Erich, 215, 278, 281, 294
Housebreakers: emulating Western
European computer scene, founding
of, 165-66; first Polish C-4 group, 164
Hungary, Socialist Realism in, 65
Iasnaia Poliana (journal), 149
Ignatova, Elena, 116, 117
index of hostility, 141
Instruktsiia po Vyzhivaniiu (IPV), 236;
most famous text, 243^44
Irwin, Zachary, 86
Islam: global, 86, 88, 94; as argument
against racism, 93; concept of,
separated from concept of “Muslim,”
88-89; lslamska vjrska zajednica
(Islamic Religious Community), 87
Islamic revival, 85, 86-87, 89
isolation, 9, 311; as a characteristic trait
of Soviet man, 150; isolationism
opposed by Trust Group, 138;
self-imposed of Yellow Submarine
members, 201
Isotamm, Johnny B., 50
istina and pravda (truth), 77
Iufit, Evgenii, 76, 77
Ivanov, Boris: contributor to Krasnyi
shchedrinets, 113; contributor to
Lepta, 112; founding editor of
Chasy, published in “37,” 108
Izetbegovic, Alija, 86, 100
Jenks, Chris, 161
Jewish emigration movement, 139. See
also refuseniks, Jewish
Jordan, Carlo, 288
June 1, 1971 rally, 148
Kan, Aleksandr, 258, 259
Katsman, Anna, 110
Keldriline Heli (Basement Sound) later
Vantorel, 48-49, 52
KGB, 57, 111, 133, 183, 201; case
against GrOb, 234; curated networks
of “cultural reservations,” 260; and
Siberian bands, 237. See also Trust
Group
Khlebnikov, Velimir, 114, 115, 118
Khlebnikov Questionnaire, 114
Khodasevich, Vladislav, 118
Khramov, Nikolai, 133, 145-46
Khronopulo, Iurii, 140
Kiis, Margus, 48
Kiossev, Alexander, 36
Kiselev, Iurii, as Trust Group
member, artist and disability rights
activist, 143
Klub-81, 112, 260
Knezevic, Anto, 86
Kolarska-Bobihska, Lena, 166
Kommunizm (band), 242
komputerowiec (computer user). See
computer users
Komsomol, 45, 148, 159-60, 180, 183,
184, 193, 201, 235, 236, 239
Kooperativ Nishtiak (band), founded by
Kirill Rybiakov, 237, 244
Kotov, Vladimir, 246
Kowalczyk, Angela “China,” 224
Krack, Erhard, 280, 290
Krasnyi shchedrinets (journal), 113
Krivulin, Viktor: attended Blok seminar
at Leningrad State University, 116;
co-founder and literary editor of
“37,” editor-in-chief of Severnaia
pochta, 108; contributor to Lepta,
112; on the place of unofficial poetry
in twentieth-century literary history,
111; responses to Blok Questionnaire
on “The Twelve,” 117, 118, 120; as
scholar and critic, 110
Krochik, Gennadii, 140
Kruchenykh, Aleksei, 241
Krug (journal), 113
Kublanovskii, Iurii, 116
Kurekhin, Sergei : and Pop-Mekhanika,
234
332
Index
Kustov, Vladimir, 76
Kuz’min, Vadim “Dima,” 235, 240
Kuzminskii, Konstantin, 112
KWV (Kommunale
Wohnungsverwaltung), in East
Berlin, 278; deficiencies of, 291
Kyjov (Czechoslovakia), 71
Large, David Clay, 285
The Last Soviet Generation. See
Yurchak, Alexei
late socialism, 11-17; in GDR, 277;
ineffectiveness of, 14; late socialist
citizens, 3; live differently than
envisioned by, 180; maturation into
final-day socialism, 18; in Poland,
163
Laz^rescu, Dr. Mircea, 69
Leary, Timothy 1, 3, 4, 48, 52, 55
Leipzig: Beat Riots of October 30,
1965, illegal concert spaces and
squats set up in, 222
Lemke, Thomas, Susanne Krasmann,
and Ulrich Brdckling, 305
Leningrad: birthplace of Russian Ska,
233; Blok house museum, 115;
home of Yellow Submarine, 182;
Kazan Cathedral, 179; last private
wooden house in, 186; Leningrad
State University, 180, 183; Nevskii
Prospekt, 179, 183; riot of rock
lovers on July 4, 1978, 198; special
seminar on Blok at Leningrad State
University, 116; Technological
Institute, 183; typewritten samizdat
periodicals in, 107
Leningrad Rock Club: KGB-sponsored,
14, 259-60
Lennon, John: annual rallies
commemorating, 135, 149
Lepta (The Contribution), 112
Letov, Igor “Egor”: created Armiia
Vlasov, 239; early years, 234; family
members’ political allegiances, 245;
hostility in work of 1980s, 240;
joined National Bolshevik Party,
243; journey with Ianka Diagileva,
236; repression of, in a psychiatric
hospital, 235; return to Siberia, 238.
See also GrOb
Letov, Sergei, 234, 235
Lifshitz, Mikhail, 246
Lipnitskii, Aleksandr, 257, 258
literary criticism: Central Committee
of the Communist Party’s resolution
“On Literary Criticism,” 113;
cultural underground’s turn toward,
111; unofficial literary criticism, 113
Literaturnoe obozrenie (journal), 113,
124n30
Liubertsy (Russia), 234
Living vnye, 180, 181, 182
Löffler, Jörg, 210
Lorenz, Peter “Flake,” 219, 222
MfS (Ministerium für Staatssicherheits).
See Stasi
“MfS-Lied” (Namenlos), 214
MIS A (Miscara de Integrare Spirituala
in Absolut), 23; activities and scope
of the movement, 24; and collecti ve
spiritual practices, 35, 36, 37
Madison, Andrei, 144, 145
“madness,” 12, 63-64, 67, 68
magnitizdat. See music distribution
Mahmood, Saba, 46
managers: conflict between, 264; early
“rock managers,” 258
Mandel’stam, Osip, 118
Marquardt, Sven, 213, 219
Marxism-Leninism, 18
Mayakovsky, Vladimir, 241
meditation, 23, 226, 27, 33, 34, 54, 55,
308, 314. See also Transcendental
Meditation Affair
Medvedkov, Iurii Vladimirovich, 142
menial jobs, 109, 121n5; allowed
Bivolaru to pursue his passion, 28; of
rock musicians, 265
Moskva (journal), 110
Index
333
Modernism, 76, 111, 118
Moldt, Dirk, 279-80, 282
Morozova, Marina, 139
Moscow: Arbat, 9; initiators of
independent peace movement lived
in, 131; Manezh Gallery, 69; rallies
commemorating John Lennon in the
Lenin Hills, 135
Muniz, Albert and Thomas O’Guinn,
167-68
music distribution: magnitizdat, 267,
275n47; music shops, 272; musicians
as initial distributors, 268, 269;
prices of tape and/or cassette albums
outside Leningrad, 269-70; sound
recording kiosks, 267; spread of
Leningrad-made albums, 270
music production: making taped albums,
268-69; switch from reel-to-reel
tapes to cassettes, 272
Muslims: critics and sympathetic
observers of, 86; and nationally
based politics, 88; and participatory
education, 85-86; and perception
of backwardness, 91; promoting
historical achievements of, 90-91;
recognized as a “constitutive nation,”
88; use of the term “Muslim,” 101nl3
Namenlos (band), 214, 287
Nationalism: Russian, 15; in Yugoslavia
in 1960s, 88
Nationalists: Russian punks, 15
National Bolshevism, 243
Nechaev, Vadim, 192
Necrorealists, 76-78
negativity: negative conceptualization
of freedom in Free Initiative
manifesto, 136; negative freedom,
144-46; negative pacifism, 148; of
Soviet bohemia, 144, 154n70; Trust
Group’s goal not negative, 132
Nekrasov, Nikolai, 114
Nemirov, Miroslav, 237, 238, 239, 241,
243, 244
Nemirova, Gusei’ (née Savalatova), 236
Neumann, Konrad, 280, 289, 290
Neumoev, Roman, 237; and Christian-
nationalist scene, 243; today, 244
Nikonova, Ry (Anna Tarshis), 114
New Left, 148, 197
“Nick Rock-n-Roli” (Nikolai
Kuntsevich), 238, 244
nomenklatura, 183, 262
nonconformism, 3; lifestyle, success in
uniting people, 198
nonconformist artists, 3
Novosibirsk, 234, 238
Novyi mir (journal), 110, 115
OBERIU, 241
Obshchina (journal), 112
Obvodnyi kanal, 107, 111, 114
Ofeliia (Svetlana Barabash), 147, 149
Ogorodnik, Aleksandr, 144-45
Okhapkin, Oleg, 112, 120
Okudzhava, Bulat, 190
Oldenburg, Ray, 164
Omsk, 234, 238, 242
“On Measures for Regulating the
Activities Amateur Variety Musical
Collectives in the City of Moscow”
(decree), 263
Ostalgie, 224—25
Oushakine, Sergei, 119
pacifism, 42; and anti-border feelings,
149; defined, 129; hippies and,
147-48; as protest against Soviet
system and systems of coercion, 148
pacifists, 3, 15, 142, 307
Pazukhin, Evgenii, 112
peace. See pacifism
perestroika, 76, 112, 121, 134, 143,
151, 200, 235, 236, 238, 242, 244
Perspektivy (journal), 197-98, 199, 200
Piatoe koleso (TV show), viewers’
responses to Necrorealist
performances, 77
Pinyayev, Anatoli, 54, 61n60
334
Index
Planlos (band), 210, 211, 212
Platonov, Andrei, 241
Popov, Iurii (aka “Diversant”): arrest,
135-36, 152n27; death of (1999),
136; founder of Free Initiative, 134
Poppe, Ulrike, 281
Posev (band), 233
practices : of computer use, 159,
162; counterculture at Yellow
Submarine commune, 184; Eastern
spiritual practices, 27; hippie
movement as emotional practices,
45; mixing spiritual practices,
55-56; Necrorealists’ instantiation
of practices, 78; practices associated
with drive for the imaginary
elsewhere of hippie youth, 48;
practices of regulating bodies, 57;
punk practices, 208; religious and
dropping out of socialism, 98;
and rituals, Islamic, 86; as sites of
agency, 46; spiritual practices like
yoga, 24, 25
Pravda (newspaper), 8
pravda versus istina, 8
Preporod (Rebirth), 91, 97
Prigov, Dmitrii, 114
Prague, events of 1968, 42
“Prolix Diary” (§tefan Bertalan), 74-75
psychedelics. See drugs
psychiatry, 57, 63, 69—70
public diplomacy, 132
Pudovkina, Elena, 116
punk (genre), 2, 14, 207; concerts
in Protestant churches, 216; as
a dangerous style of rock, 239;
Eastern punk rejection of the state
and its ideology, 209-10; GDR’s
carrot-and-stick approach to, 215;
“Härte gegen Punk,” 216, 219,
225; as imitation of Western styles,
215; individualism and spontaneity,
221; integrated into the state music
industry, 220; memory of, 221; post-
1989 colonization of the Eastern
scene (Germany), 223; Prenzlauer
Berg scene and domestic opposition,
288; scene in Siberia as most radical
music scene, in the USSR, 240;
scenes in subcultural institutions,
209; Siberian punk network founded,
236; Soviet and Western, differences
of, 241; “too much future” of East
German punks, 210; transferred to
Stasi division for combating political
opposition, 216
punks: attitudes toward work, 211-12;
employed outside planned economy,
213; enjoyed “outsider” status, 219;
in GDR, 287; “hardcore,” 216, 287;
introduced to punk by articles in
Junge Welt and Neues Leben, 215;
memory culture, 223-24; mistrust of
perestroika, 239; in nationalist, anti-
Yeltsin camp in 1990s, 244; reasons
for working as informers, 217-18;
recruited by Stasi, 216; relationship
with the Stasi, 214-19; responses
to fall of the Berlin Wall, 221; and
revelations of Stasi collaboration,
223; Siberian, lack of sympathy
with dissidents, 236; viewed as part
of “negative-decadent youth,” 215;
working with Evangelical church-
based dissidents, 219. See also
squatting
questionnaires: as “mimetic resistance,”
119; in unofficial journals, 113, 120
Rabin, Oskar, 149-50
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 19n2;
and Samizdat Archive, 151n5
Ramet, Sabrina, 86, 97
Reaganomics, 160
records, 221, 224, 267, 271
refuseniks: Jewish, 138; and Trust
Group, 137-39; in Trust Group cite
moral-ethical objections to Soviet
citizenship, 139
Index
335
Reichardt, Sven, 304, 308
Reitman, Mark, 138, 141
Rekshan, Vladimir, 257, 258
religion: religious dissenters, 3; religious
institutions, repression of, 88;
revival of Orthodoxy in Romania,
36; unofficial poets’ emphasis on
Blok’s religious imagery, 116; in
Yugoslavia, national connotations
of, 88. See also Catholicism;
Christianity, hippies
Remizova, Mania, 145
Richardson, Lewis Fry, 140-41
Riordan, Jim, 161
rock music, 41, 42, 44, 47, 49-50, 51,
52, 57, 235, 238, 255, 258; Beat
accepted then banned in the GDR,
214—15; in GDR, history of, 214-15;
importance of lyrics in Soviet Union,
241; rock community in Leningrad,
259; Russian Orthodox Church,
attitude towards, 246; scene in
Tiumen’ and Komsomol, 237; and
values associated with pacifism,
148-49
Romania, 9; isolation from outside
world during Ceau§ecu regime, 28;
Socialist Realism in, 64
Romanov, Alexei, arrest of, 263
Rostock (Germany), 281
Rubchenko, Aleksandr, 133
Rüddenklau, Wolfgang, 285, 288
Russian Futurism, 241
Russkii Prory v (rock movement), 243
Sade, Marquise de, 31
Sakharov, Andrei, 130, 137-38, 140
Salinger, J. D., 149
samizdat (dissident): “Appeal to Young
America” circulated in, 134,
samizdat (literary), 54; capacity of
official culture to define value of,
115; films, 76; hippies and, 62; Igor
Letov familiar with, 234; literary,
109; new journals focus on original
literary work of unofficial writers,
111; politicization by default,”
119; as a subculture and “inner
emigration,” 108-9; typewritten
periodicals replacing individual
publications, 107; typewritten
periodicals similar to “thick”
journals, 110
samizdat (rock), fanzines, 255; Roksi
fanzine, 270
Sarajevo: Gazi Husrev-bey madrassa
established in, 87; Muslim
community connected with larger
Islamic world, 93; university Faculty
of Islamic Studies opens, 96
Satter, David, 146
Scharloth, Joachim, 304
“sluggish schizophrenia”: intellectuals
and artists disregarding Ceau§escu’s
regime diagnosed with, 69
Securitate, 23; archives, 28; first
investigation of Bivolaru (1971), 29;
investigations of Bivolaru (1979,
1982), 34; officers at Costinesti, 35;
§tefan Bertalan’s anxiety about, 75
Sedakova, Olga, 109
Seigworth, Gregory, 47
self: hippie self-fashioning, 42; hippies
opposed Soviet norms through self-
expression, 45; neoliberal, 304-5;
self-fashioning rooted in shared
experience of modernity, 15; self-
transformation as goal of Eastern
activists, 308
Selivanov, Dmitrii, 242
seminar on “Peace and Social
Research,” 142
Serp, Sergei, 76
Serviciul Roman de Informatii (SRI), 23
Severnaia pochta, 107, 111, 114, 120
sexuality: and spiritual growth, 34-35
Shalamov, Varlam, 242
Shankara, Adi, 32
Shvarts, Elena, 111, 122nl6
Sigei, Sergei, 114
336
Index
Silver Age, 115, 116, 118
Simferopol: rock festival in August
1987, 236; Siberian musicians in, 238
Simpson, Patricia Anne, 220
sistema (the system), 41, 42; 145,
147, 148; discovered the Yellow
Submarine commune as a hideout,
199-200; other terms used, 43,
152nl8. See also hippies, Yellow
Submarine
Slaves of Keyboard, 163, 164
Smirnov, Ilia, 240, 256, 263, 264
Socialist Realism, 64-66, 72, 78,
79-80n2
Social Research and Research on Issues
of Peace, 142. See also Trust Group,
offshoots of
“Solntse” (“Sun” or “Sunny”), 58nl
Solov’ev, Vladimir, 116
Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr, 130, 236,
239, 245
S0renson, Knut H., 161-62, 166
Sovetskii pisateF (publishing house), 112
Soviet Committee for the Defense of
Peace (SCDP), 129, 139
Social Research and Research on Issues
of Peace (group), developed from
Friendship and Dialogue seminar,
142
space: claiming in literary process, 119;
creating distance from the regime, 3;
kitchen as shorthand, 205n28; living,
SED responsible for allocating, 278;
punks engineering authentic space,
209; socialist, as contested through
“micromilieus,” 285; squatting
provided, for urban subcultures, 295
Spiegel, Der, 210, 222
Spinki Menta (band), 240, 248n20
spirituality: as a way to bypass Soviet
atheism, 54; yoga as a spiritual
practice, 33, 36
squats: used as art galleries and
exhibition spaces, 286—87
squatters: 3, carried out maintenance
work and repairs, 282; majority
of probably young, single adults,
280; perceived asocial behavior,
294; professing support for GDR,
284; prospective, searching for and
finding housing, 279; “solidarity
action” of, 288; and subversive
graffiti, 288; and the Stasi, 293-94;
state’s tougher approach toward,
290
squatting: differences in authorities’
responses to, 292; defined, 277;
and empty spaces used as niches
for alternative culture, 285-86;
facilitated alternative milieus across
GDR, 285; as a form of private
protest, 283-84; and GDR housing
shortage, 278, 295n2; and GDR’s
punk scene, 287-88; link between
alternative lifestyles and, 284-85;
low eviction rate in cases of, 281-82;
not restricted to young adults and
outsiders, 281; and officials at local
level, 290; practiced across GDR
but most widespread in East Berlin,
280; state opposition to, 289; state
toleration of, 283; strategies to
counter, in East Berlin, 289-90; as
way to circumvent dependency on
the state, 278, 284
Stalskii, Suleiman, 242
Startsev, Sasha, 270
Stasi: aware of problematic of squatting,
293; difficulties in dealing with
punks, 218; punk scene co-opted by,
214; on punk work ethic, 212; punks
as informers, 14, 208; recruiting
members of the punk scene, 216;
report on squatting in Dresden, 283;
shut down EP Gallery, 286
Stefko, Jolanta, 70
stiob, 120, 188, 204n25, 234
Stoian, Nicolae and Stoian, Murielle, 26
Strana i mir (journal), 136, 138
Stratanovskii, Sergei: board member of
Klub-81, 112; co-founder, co-editor
of Chasy, Dialog, Obvodnyi
Index
337
kanal, 108; responses to Blok
Questionnaire, 116, 121; as scholar
and critic, 110
Strauss, Sarah, 28, 38n20
student activism: part of a larger
movement, 93; and repression, late
1970s and 1980s, 99-100; across
Yugoslavia, 96; Yugoslav nationalist
and religiously inflected, 89-90
student movements: Sarajevo
madrassa students as part of, 85; in
Yugoslavia, 89
students: conflicts with madrassa
administration, 95-98; madrassa, 15;
madrassa, strike of (January 1972),
85, 90, 96-97; secular and Muslim,
common concerns of, 93
style, 310; as a crucial element of punk
subculture, 210-11; jeans, 194-95;
punk DIY aesthetic and a society of
shortages, 213; in studying “dropping
out” and “creating one’s own,”
10-11; style clusters, 161; styles of
self-fashioning, 51-52
subculture: Hebdige’s definition of, 6
subjectivity, 304, 305, 308, 311, 312,
314; of the late socialist subject,
181; Soviet hippie and imaginary
elsewhere, 47, 57
Sudakov, Oleg “Manager,” 235, 239
Tallinn, 9, 41; early center of Hare
Krishna movement in the USSR, 54;
GrOb farewell concert in, 243; hippie
tradition to gather in on May 1, 43;
Tallinn Polytechnic Institute, 48;
tamizdat, 234
Tamm, Mihkel Ram, 54, 55-56, 56,
61n64
Tantrism: Bivolaru’s interest in, 31-32;
Tantric yoga, 32, 36; Tantric sex, 33
tape recorders, 267, 271
Tartu, Buddhist studies at University of,
54; Lotman’s study circle, 184
Thaw (1956-1964), 42, 67; Thaw
generation, 190
“37” (journal), 107, 111
“The Twelve” 115, 116, 117, 118
therapy, 333, 35, 308; art therapy and
psychodrama at Gataia Psychiatric
Hospital, 70; Tichy’s photographs as
self-therapy, 74
Tichy, Miroslav, 71-74
Tiumen’, 236, 238
Tolstoyans, 129
tradition: little memory of Russia’s
pacifist tradition, 129; new punk
generation rejected tradition of the
Siberian school, 246; references of
punks, 241; unofficial poets as heirs
to Russian poetic, 111; of writers
resisting appropriation of poets, 114
Transcendental Meditation Affair
(Romania), 25-27; Bivolaru caught
up in, 34
Transponans (journal), 114
Troger, Frank, 223
Troianskii, Sergei: arrest, 135-36,
152n27; death of (2004), 136; leader
of Free Initiative, 134
Troitsky, Artemy, 239, 240, 256, 257,
258, 262, 264-65, 272
Tropillo, Andrei, and rock magnitizdat,
267-68, access to a recording
studio, 267
Trust Group: announcement
“Concerning the Trust Group,”
141; attempts to expose, 136-37;
formation, 130; and counterculture,
134; criticism and misperceptions
of members, 150; offshoots of, 142;
persecution of by police and KGB,
133; and public diplomacy, 132;
scientists’ involvement in, 139-40,
143; social makeup of, 136
Tsaritsyno: annual gathering of hippies
on June 1, 135
Umweltbibliothek, 288
unofficial literature: goals differ from
human rights samizdat texts, 109;
relationship with official literature,
338
índex
111—12; similarities between cultural
underground and official culture, 110
unofficial scientific research seminars:
became several independent
seminars, 14fM-l; origins in laser
research laboratory in Dolgoprudnyi,
140
Velikonja, Mitja, 86
Verdey, Katherine, 213
Verweigerung, 7
Viitna (Estonia), early hippie summer
camp, 43
Vishnevskaia, Iuliia, 130
Vivekanada, 32, 145
Volchek, Dmitrii, 114
Volkova, Inna, 260, 266
VoFtskaia, Tat’iana, 116-18
Vorona Slobodka (Leningrad squat),
186, 189
Voskresenie (band), 234
Voznesenskaia, Iuliia, 112
Warsaw: Grzybowska Street computer
fair (Gryzbowska fair), 165
Waters, Roger, 222
“We Want Changes,” (Viktor Tsoi),
238; anthem of perestroika, 239
“writers” (pisateli), duplicated tapes,
271; no “writers” in Leningrad, 271
Writers’ Union, 108, 112
Yellow Submarine, 11, 17; breakup of,
200; connections with the hippie
sistema, 191; described in a Radio
Free Europe report, 192; differing
views on hippies, 198-99; fun and
parody defining mental space of,
186, 188; on graffiti, 179; insider
knowledge as mechanism for
creating distance, 186-87; “Lazha”
(play), 191; and “living vny^,” 181;
logbook, 185-86, 187—91,188,
198; members of, 182-84; members
interviewed by KGB, 201; overrun
by “professional” hippies, 199-200;
product of its time and place, 180;
“upstairs” and “downstairs,” 193-98,
200; visual distinctiveness of the
house, 191-92; “Yellow Submarine”
(song) embodied commune’s belief
in absurdity of the outside, 185
Yeltsin, Boris, 243
Yippies, 13, 201
yoga, practitioners of (yogis), 2:
Bivolaru’s, 24; classes at the
Bucharest Medical Trade Union
House, 28; interest in Soviet Estonia,
54; and liberalization in Romania,
25; marginalization of practices
connected with, 27; as a “mysterious
science,” 33; mystical interpretations,
29; Orientalist interpretation, 36, 41;
promoted by regime, 25; Tantric, 24
Yugoslavia: handling national diversity,
88; intersection of political and
cultural movements, 99; Socialist
Realism in, 64; student newspapers,
93; student strike (June 1968) across,
89; tradition of student rebellion, 86
Yurchak, Alexei, The Last Soviet
Generation 19 (n. 4), 28, 51, 71,
157-58, 171, 180, 181, 234, 236
Zagreb: center of student nationalist
movement, 89
Zatlin, Jonathan, 211
Zdravomyslova, Elena, 144
Zemzem (journal): building a community
of Yugoslav Muslims, 94; building
a modem Islam, 90-91; coverage
of Palestine and interpretations of
anticolonial, revolutionary politics,
93; debates about Islamic past in, 91;
and Muslim student activism, 85;
reconciling religion and science, 92;
version of Islam promoted, 86
Zharikov, Sergei, 234
Index
339
Zhevtun, Igor “Jeff/’ 245
ZSMP (Zwi^zek Socjalistycznei
Mlodziezy Polskiej/Association of
Socialist Youth in Poland), 159-60;
clubs lost role as “third places,”
164-65; facilitated domestication of
computers (mid-1980s), 164; state-
sponsored computer clubs of, 157,
159-60
Zvezda (journal), 110
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author2 | Fürst, Juliane 1973- McLellan, Josie 1975- |
author2_role | edt edt |
author2_variant | j f jf j m jm |
author_GND | (DE-588)135865581 (DE-588)130580066 |
author_facet | Fürst, Juliane 1973- McLellan, Josie 1975- |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV044020149 |
callnumber-first | H - Social Science |
callnumber-label | HN380 |
callnumber-raw | HN380.7.A8 |
callnumber-search | HN380.7.A8 |
callnumber-sort | HN 3380.7 A8 |
callnumber-subject | HN - Social History and Conditions |
classification_rvk | NQ 8295 NQ 8304 NQ 8305 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)973192871 (DE-599)BVBBV044020149 |
dewey-full | 306.09437 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 306 - Culture and institutions |
dewey-raw | 306.09437 |
dewey-search | 306.09437 |
dewey-sort | 3306.09437 |
dewey-tens | 300 - Social sciences |
discipline | Soziologie Geschichte |
era | Geschichte gnd |
era_facet | Geschichte |
format | Book |
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geographic | Europe, Eastern Social conditions Ostblock (DE-588)4075730-4 gnd |
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id | DE-604.BV044020149 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T07:41:22Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781498525145 |
language | English |
lccn | 016037411 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-029427685 |
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physical | vii, 343 Seiten Illustrationen |
publishDate | 2017 |
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publisher | Lexington Books |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Dropping out of socialism the creation of alternative spheres in the Soviet Bloc edited by Juliane Fürst and Josie McLellan Lanham Lexington Books [2017] vii, 343 Seiten Illustrationen txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Includes bibliographical references and index Geschichte gnd rswk-swf Communism and individualism Europe, Eastern Communism and liberty Europe, Eastern Post-communism Europe, Eastern Subkultur (DE-588)4058326-0 gnd rswk-swf Alternativbewegung (DE-588)4068597-4 gnd rswk-swf Europe, Eastern Social conditions Ostblock (DE-588)4075730-4 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)1071861417 Konferenzschrift 2014 Bristol gnd-content Ostblock (DE-588)4075730-4 g Alternativbewegung (DE-588)4068597-4 s Subkultur (DE-588)4058326-0 s Geschichte z DE-604 Fürst, Juliane 1973- (DE-588)135865581 edt McLellan, Josie 1975- (DE-588)130580066 edt LoC Fremddatenuebernahme application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029427685&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung BSB Muenchen - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029427685&sequence=000005&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Literaturverzeichnis Digitalisierung BSB Muenchen - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029427685&sequence=000006&line_number=0003&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Register // Gemischte Register |
spellingShingle | Dropping out of socialism the creation of alternative spheres in the Soviet Bloc Communism and individualism Europe, Eastern Communism and liberty Europe, Eastern Post-communism Europe, Eastern Subkultur (DE-588)4058326-0 gnd Alternativbewegung (DE-588)4068597-4 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4058326-0 (DE-588)4068597-4 (DE-588)4075730-4 (DE-588)1071861417 |
title | Dropping out of socialism the creation of alternative spheres in the Soviet Bloc |
title_auth | Dropping out of socialism the creation of alternative spheres in the Soviet Bloc |
title_exact_search | Dropping out of socialism the creation of alternative spheres in the Soviet Bloc |
title_full | Dropping out of socialism the creation of alternative spheres in the Soviet Bloc edited by Juliane Fürst and Josie McLellan |
title_fullStr | Dropping out of socialism the creation of alternative spheres in the Soviet Bloc edited by Juliane Fürst and Josie McLellan |
title_full_unstemmed | Dropping out of socialism the creation of alternative spheres in the Soviet Bloc edited by Juliane Fürst and Josie McLellan |
title_short | Dropping out of socialism |
title_sort | dropping out of socialism the creation of alternative spheres in the soviet bloc |
title_sub | the creation of alternative spheres in the Soviet Bloc |
topic | Communism and individualism Europe, Eastern Communism and liberty Europe, Eastern Post-communism Europe, Eastern Subkultur (DE-588)4058326-0 gnd Alternativbewegung (DE-588)4068597-4 gnd |
topic_facet | Communism and individualism Europe, Eastern Communism and liberty Europe, Eastern Post-communism Europe, Eastern Subkultur Alternativbewegung Europe, Eastern Social conditions Ostblock Konferenzschrift 2014 Bristol |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029427685&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029427685&sequence=000005&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029427685&sequence=000006&line_number=0003&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT furstjuliane droppingoutofsocialismthecreationofalternativespheresinthesovietbloc AT mclellanjosie droppingoutofsocialismthecreationofalternativespheresinthesovietbloc |