Taking the Soviet Union apart room by room: domestic architecture before and after 1991
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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Ithaca ; London
Northern Illinois University Press
2023
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Schriftenreihe: | NIU Series in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Literaturverzeichnis Register // Gemischte Register |
Beschreibung: | xvii, 181 Seiten Illustrationen, Pläne |
ISBN: | 9781501771200 |
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Contents List of Figures Acknowledgments Romanization Glossary Introduction ix xi xiii XV 1 1. Remodeling 27 2. Sleeping 48 3. Eating 74 4. Cleaning 95 5. Socializing 113 Conclusion: A Note on Time, Style, and the End of the Post-Soviet Era 128 Notes Bibliography Index 133 163 175
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Index Page numbers in italics indicate figures. “About Property” law (Ukrainian SSR, 1991), 60-61 “About the Development of Residential Construction in the USSR” decree (1957), 99 accountability, official, 31,38 activism, anti-construction in Kyiv, 20-21, 22 aesthetics: functionalist, of kitchens, 79, 81; of hygiene-related spaces, 96-97,98, 111; of paper architecture, 22-23; in remont, 29-30, 33,35-36,47; and sleep-related furniture, 57, 60-67 Afonia (1975), film, 96 allocation: ofhousing, 50, 51-52, 104-5, 114-15; of spatial functions, 56,66-67, 72-73, 120-21 amenities: in post-Soviet sanitary blocks, 104-5; shared, 50 apartment blocks, buildings, and series: bombing of, 131; individually designed, 84-85, 102-3, 105,106; post-Soviet, 105-7; pre-1917,12, 18-19, 38-40, 98-99, 138n87; sleeping space in, 53, 55, 56-57,62-66; standardized, 12, 13,18-19, 84,152n58; state of emergency in, 38-44. See also communal apartments; khrushchevka apartments architectural discourse: in demand for remont, 43; dining rooms in, 148-49n4; and reality, 22-23, 24-25, 100-104 Asquith, Lindsay, 15-16 Attfield, Judy, 2 avariinyi dom (building in precarious condition), 38-41 babushatnik (grandma’s den), 26 balconies, 20-21 barracks, 71,75, 144-45n4 basements, 123-24 bathhouses (bania), 119-20 bathrooms: in architectural fantasies and reality, 100-104; combined and separate, 98-100; and post-Soviet architects, 104-7; post-Soviet remont of, 107-12; visibility of. 95-98. See also hygiene, spaces for; sanitary blocks bedrooms: in domestic practice, 14-15; mean ings of, 8,48; numbers and bureaucracy in
designation of, 52-53, 55-57, 60; in private sleep, 68-71; replanning in isolation of, 71-73; rise of, 17, 60-67; as social space, 120-21,125-26; as twentieth-century sleeping space, 49-50. See also sleeping spaces beds, 56, 57, 65, 66-67,120-21 behaviors: abnormal, in bathrooms, 96; antisocial, and communal spaces, 76; changes in, 7 Benjamin, Walter, 27-28 bidets, 105-7 books on remodeling, 32 boundaries: for eating spaces, 93-94; on room functions, 15-16; of social spaces, 118; of Soviet normalcy, 5-6 Bourdieu, Pierre, 3 Boym Svetlana, 27-28, 39, 81, 97 Brezhnev, Leonid/Brezhnev-era (1964-1982), 55,81 Buchli, Victor, 57, 148-49n4 building codes: and kitchens, 78, 84-86; and sanitary blocks, 99-100,104,108-10,156n5O; Sanitary Norms and Regulations (SNIP), 24, 53-54,62,78, 114-15 Bulakh, Tatiana, 45-46 Bulgakov, Mikhail: Heart of a Dog, 52-53 Burda Moden magazine, 19, 24, 31-32 bureaucracy, 33-34, 51-60. See also building codes; Gosstroi (State Committee of Construction); Sanitary Norms and Regulations (SNiP) byt (everyday life), 39, 57, 102 capital reconstruction, 40-41, 143n61 cast-in-place concrete construction, 105 celebrations, 77, 80-82, 83, 119 censorship and kitchen culture, 94,119 Certeau, Michel de, 8-9 175
176 INDEX choice: aesthetic, for bathrooms, 96-97; aes thetic, for remont, 33; in post-Soviet style, 130; of products, in the rise of the bedroom, 66-67 Cieraad, Irene, 88 class, socioeconomic: in differences in domestic life, 12-13; kitchen remodels as indicator of, 88; mortgages as signifier of, 128; and remodeling in post-Soviet identity, 25-26 Cohen, Lizabeth, 15-16 collectivity in sleeping space, 69-71,72-73 Collier, Stephen, 13,29-30 comfort: in eating-related spaces, 74, 76, 81, 82, 89, 91, 92-93; in hygiene-related spaces, 96, 99, 100, 102-3, 108-10, 111-12; as remodeling goal, 41-42; in sleep-related spaces, 71,72-73 commodities/commodification: access to, in home improvement, 31-32, 35-36, 38, 43-44, 126-27; and hygiene-related spaces, 95-96; in remont, 27, 28-29, 44; and the rise of the bedroom, 66-67 commonalities, 12-13 commonalities of multiunit buildings, 33 communal apartments: dilapidated state of, in demand for remont, 38-41; eating-related spaces in, 75-76, 149n5; in everyday history and scale, 10; sanitary blocks in, 95, 97, 98-99; sleeping spaces in, 49-51, 52-53; standardization of, 12, 13, 18-19; in Ukraine, 18 compaction (uplotnenie), 50, 51-52, 75-76 competitions, architectural, 24-25, 43, 56, 58-59, 103 conditions of housing and living: absentee state in, 114; in kitchen culture, 80-81; post-Soviet, 1, 4, 7, 10, 26, 131; in remont, 29, 30, 38-42, 43,45, 47; and residential mobility, 129; and sleeping spaces, 48, 50,52-53, 61; and social spaces, 121-22 conflicts, 3, 36-37, 44, 47, 76 Constructivists/Constructivism, 13,22-23, 49-50, 149n5 consumer
goods/consumerism: changes in patterns of, 6; demand for, in post-Soviet construction, 114-15; economic reforms in, 2-3; and post-Soviet bathroom remont, 111-12; in post-Soviet identity, 45-46, 127; in remont, 28-29, 38,42-43,45-46, 47, 111-12; in sleeping space, 57, 66-67; style in, 129-30 continuities: in construction regulations, 114-15; in domestic practices, 16; in post-Soviet sanitary blocks, 105; of remont, 29-30, 44; spatial, in everyday life, 2,6-7 cooperatives, 34-35, 61, 85,91, 99-100 couches, 50-51, 56, 57,65, 66-67,90-93, 120-21 courtyards, 18, 122-24 Cromley, Elizabeth, 7, 15-16,93 culture: consumerist, in the rise of the bedroom, 66-67; kitchens in, 17, 79,81,119; mortgages in, 128; in post-Soviet identity, 4, 25; remodeling in, 1,16-17,29, 30,47; revolutionary change in, 11; stairwells in, 123-24; visual, sanitary blocks in, 95-98 damage, structural, 116-17 Deleuze, Gilles, 11 demand: consumer, in post-Soviet construc tion, 114-15; current, for remodeling, 128; for kitchen technology, 79-80; for labor, 28-29, 30, 34-38, 105-7; perestroika in, 2-3; in remont, 30, 38-44,47; Soviet realities in roots of, 16-17 dining rooms, 52-53, 75-79, 87,89-90,119, 148-49n4. See also eating spaces distribution of housing, 6-7, 51-53, 55, 75-76 diversity of homes, 11-12,18 documentation of replanning, post-Soviet, 115-17 “Domashnii kaleidoscop” (Rabonitsa maga zine), 31-32 Dom V kotorom ia zhivu (The house I live in, 1957), 79-80 “Dorn v kotorom my zhivem” (Rabonitsa magazine), 31-32 doors: for bedrooms and private sleeping spaces, 64-65, 66,68, 69, 72; in creating social
spaces, 117-18,124,125; in regulation Soviet kitchens, 85-86; in replanning sanitary blocks, 109-11 Dostoevsky, Fedor: Crime and Punishment, 49-50 drywall, 36, 61-62. See also materials, con struction; partitions/partition walls eating spaces: as favorite spaces in everyday life, 93-94; late-Soviet food spaces, 79-83; post-Soviet kitchens, 83-93; as social spaces, 17, 74-75, 79-83, 118-19; tables, 74, 75-79, 81-82, 83, 89-93; transformation of, 17. See also dining rooms; food; kitchens; practices: domestic economy: centralized, socialist, 4; collapse of, in supply, 34-35, 36-37; economic crisis, 2-3, 36-37, 129; economic reform and liberaliza-
INDEX tion, 2-3, 83-84,85; informal, 66-67, 115; post-1991 downshift in, and remont, 44-45; Soviet, in product distribution, 62, 81-82 Egmond, Horike, 9-10 elderly persons, social spaces for, 123 elites: housing of, in demand for remont, 41-43; sanitary blocks for, 96, 102-3 entertainment, 55-56, 57, 72-73, 89, 91-92, 121-22. See also socializing, spaces for “eternal remont,” 45-46 evroremont (Euro-remodeling), 1, 5, 37, 130, 140П13 expatriates, Western, 43-44, 105-7 Fehérvâry, Krisztina, 5, 47, 88,95, 111-12 films, 19, 42-43, 79-80, 96. See also under film title fixtures, 78-79, 80, 97-98, 105-7 floor area: of eating spaces, 41-42, 79, 80-81, 82-83, 84-85, 91-92, 94; in popular sources on remont, 31-34; liberalization of state control over, 114-15; of sanitary blocks, 99-100, 104-7, 108-10,111-12; of sleeping spaces, 48-49, 51-60,65; standardization of, 18-19 food, 17, 74-75, 76-77, 79-94. See also dining rooms; eating spaces; kitchens Foot, John, 9-10 frugality, Soviet, 55, 78, 99, 108-9 functionality: of eating spaces, 76-78,79-80, 81, 82-83, 84-85, 87, 90-91, 92-94; and hygienic spaces, 104; к = n - 1 formula in, 148-49n4; and remont, 40-41, 47; of sleeping spaces and furniture, 17, 48-49, 50-51, 52-53,55-60, 66-68, 72-73; of social spaces, 57, 113, 118,119-21, 124,126; of Soviet rooms and furniture, 13-16 furniture: convertible, 57, 60, 65, 66-67, 120-21; for eating-related spaces, 74, 75-79, 81-82, 83, 85, 89-93, 119, 120; in post-Soviet kitchen remodeling, 90-93; for sleep-related spaces, 55-57, 58-60,65, 66-67; standards for, 12, 13, 15, 78,90 Fürst, Juliane, 5-6
gatherings, social, 79-82, 91-92, 119, 120-22, 124-25 gender, 22 generations, familial: in need for multiple sanitary blocks, 102-3; sleeping space for, 52, 63, 65,66,68-69, 72-73, 146-47n50; social space for, 123 gentrification, 61 geographies, 18-22 177 Gerasimova, Ekaterina, 29 German Democratic Republic, 114 glasnost, 2 Goffman, Erving, 4 Golubev, Alexey, 122-24 Gorbachev, Mikhail, 2-3 Gosstroi (State Committee of Construction), 40,43, 53, 56, 84-85, 103, 116-17 GOST (Soviet technical standards), 62, 90 Great Britain, postwar, 118 Guattari, Felix, 11 habitus (social dispositions), 3,29, 30,44,45,47 hallways, 18, 90-91,120, 123, 124 Harris, Steven, 41 hierarchies, 95, 129 history, everyday, 9-12 Home Academy Volume I, 32 homelessness, 29, 124 Housing Code of the Russian Federative SSR, 52 Housing Maintenance Offices (ZhEK), 31,35, 115-16 housing stock, 6-7, 12,18, 88, 115-16, 148n3 Houzz domestic design portal, 119 Hungary, 88 hygiene, spaces for: in architectural fantasies and reality, 100-104; combined and separate, 98-104,107, 110-11, 154nl7; late-Soviet, in images, 96-97; in post-Soviet architecture, 104-7; post-Soviet remont of, 107-12; as social spaces, 119-20. See also bathrooms; sanitary blocks hysteresis (discrepancy in social dispositions), 3 Idei vashego doma post-Soviet media outlet, 24, 33, 64, 65, 91 identity, post-Soviet, 1, 3, 4-5, 25-27, 47, 126-27, 129-31 liul’skii dozhd’ (July rain, 1966), 79-80 Hid, Melanie, 136-37n64 imports, 4, 37,43, 66-67, 85, 97-98. See also evroremont (Euro-remodeling) improved plan apartments, 41-42, 82-83,84,91 income, 36-37,
49-50, 61, 67-68 inequality, economic, 66-67, 68 infrastructure, 12-13, 29-30,105, 122-24,127 interior design/designers, 1, 5, 19, 31-34, 43-44,85. See also services, remodeling and construction Invisible Revolution, 11 Irony of Fate, The (Ironiia sud'by, 1975), 42-43, 96 Jordan, Jennifer, 82
178 INDEX Kabakov, Ilia and Emilia: The Toilet, 97 Khrushchev, Nikita, 3,4, 55, 113 khrushchevka apartments: demand for remont of, 41-43; eating-related spaces in, 41-42, 76-77; replanning of, 62-66, 126; Russian invasion of Ukraine in destruction of, 131-32; size of, 41-42, 55-56, 82-83; sleeping spaces in, 50-51, 55-57,62-66; social spaces in, 126 Kitchen Debate, 1959, 78-79 kitchens: in late-Soviet homes, 79-83; in politics, 17, 79, 81, 94,119; post-Soviet, 83-94; size of, 41-42, 79, 91-92,94; as social spaces, 82, 119; space from, for sanitary blocks, 102; as utilitarian workspace, 76; washing machines in, 108-9. See also eating spaces; food k=n- 1 formula, 51-53, 55-56, 60-61, 75-76, 148-49n4 Knauf Gips, 36,62 Krasivye kvartiry (Beautiful apartments) magazine, 33 Kvartirnyi vopros (Apartment question), 19, 24 Kyiv, Ukraine, 18, 20, 22, 37 labor: domestic, and kitchens, 76-77,149nl4; ethnic stereotyping of, 129; gendered, 23-24; in the rise of the bedroom, 62; supply and demand in availability of, 28-29, 30, 34-38, 105-7 layout, spatial: of eating spaces, 74-75, 76-77, 78, 84-85, 86-89; of hygienic spaces, 100-101; in media on remodeling, 33-34; remont in, 47; of sleeping space, 48-49, 55-57, 59,62,67-73; of social space, 115, 120-21; standardization of, 12-15. See also evroremont (Euro-remodeling); replanning (pereplanirovka) Lefebvre, Henri: Rhythmanalysis, 72 Leinarte, Dalia, 136-37n64 Lenin, Vladimir, 51-53 liberalization, economic, 2-3, 85 living conditions. See conditions of housing and living living rooms/spaces: and eating spaces, 74, 80-81, 87, 88-92, 93-94;
floor space for, in demand for remont, 41-42; post-Soviet emergence of, 125-26; and sleeping space, 55-56, 64-65, 66,69, 70-71; as social space, 118, 120,121-22 Lviv, Ukraine, 12, 18, 20,21 magazines, 19, 31-32, 33. See also under magazine title maintenance, 29, 30, 33-34, 40, 95,98-99 Mason, Peter, 9-10 mass housing: in the Baltic Soviet republics, 19; eating-related spaces in, 76-77; as modern, 16; remont as habitus in, 29; sleeping spaces in, 50-51, 55, 57; social findings in, 126-27; social spaces in, 121-23; standardization in, 13-14. See also khrushchevka apartments materiality, 8-9,66-67 materials, construction: in popular sources, 31-32; in post-Soviet style and evroremont, 130; in the rise of the bedroom, 61-62; supply and demand in remont, 35-36,38,43-44 media: food-related spaces in, 93; hygienerelated spaces in, 96-98; remont in, 31-34; replanning in, 64; as sources, 23-24 memorabilia, 81 Merzhanov, Boris, 57, 100-102,120 mobility: of labor, 30, 35-37; residential, 63, 129-30; social, 42 Moch, Leslie Page: Broad Is My Native Land, 35 models, spatial, 25-26, 83-84 Modernism, 12, 76-78, 79-80, 89,113,118, 122-23 modernization: architectural competitions in, 56,58-59; in post-Soviet discourses of normalcy, 5-6; in post-Soviet kitchen remodeling, 89; and remont, 31, 41; replanning for social space as, 126; and social spaces, 113, 114 Moldovans, 129 mortgage markets, 128 Moscow, 20, 22, 27-28, 94,124 Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears (Moskva slezam ne verit, 1981) film, 42-43,96 Moscow Scientific-Research and Project Institute of Typology and Experimental Design
(MNIITEP), 43-44 Moskoff, William, 40 multi/mono-functionality: of eating spaces, 78, 82-83, 84-85, 90-91, 92-94; of furniture in Soviet architecture, 13-15; k=n-1 formula in, 148-49n4; of sleeping spaces and furniture, 8,48-49, 50-51, 52-53, 55-57, 58-60, 65,66,67-68; of social spaces, 56,58,60,118,119-21. See also functionality Narkomfin apartment building, 149n5 Nasha Rasha (Our Russia) television show, 129 neoliberalism, 29-30 New byt apartment buildings, 102 noise of remodeling, 46-47 normalcy, post-Soviet, 5-6,26
INDEX norms: in acceptable sound levels, 46-47; in apartment size, 51, 53, 55, 104-5; in communal bathrooms, 96; formal changes to, in remont, 34-35; GOST, 62,90; in kitchen design, 78, 84-85; and sanitary blocks, 79-80, 99-100, 104-5; SNiP, 24, 53-54, 62, 78, 114-15; social, in the rise of the bedroom, 67 nostalgia, 5-6 nouveau riche, 43-44, 61,98 numbers. See floor area Ob individualnoi trudovoi deiatel’nosti (About individual labor activity) law, 34-35 objects, material, 5,66-67,129-30 1-447 apartment series, 62, 87 open apartment plans, 33, 63-64, 67, 86-89, 118, 125-26 Operatsiia У i drugie prikliucheniia Shurika (Operation Y and Shurik’s other adventures, 1965), 60 organization, spatial. See layout, spatial ownership/homeowners, 10, 20,22,46-47, 105, 115-17, 129, 136n51. See also privatization P-44 apartment housing series, 33, 104-5 panel apartments, 33, 57, 100, 102,116-17 panels, prefabricated, 12, 84-85 Papernyi, Vladimir: KuTtura Dva, 52-53 parking, 122-23 partitions/partition walls: in combining sanitary blocks, 110-11; demand for, 38-39; in domestic practices, 15-16; in kitchen remodeling, 86-87, 88-89; in popular sources on remont, 32-33,38; and sleeping spaces, 48-49,61-62; and social spaces, 115, 116-17, 125-26. See also drywall Patico, Jennifer, 25-26 People’s Commissariat of Healthcare, 51 pereplanirovka (replanning). See replanning (pereplanirovka) perestroika, 2-3, 5-6,9, 72, 83-84, 97-98, 126-27 politics: in everyday history, 9-12; of housing, in sleeping space, 48-49; kitchens in, 17, 79, 81, 94,119; of perestroika, 2; post-Soviet, 5; in remont, 29-30;
social spaces in, 117 popular culture, 26,42-43 practices: domestic, 8-9,13,15-16, 44-47; food-related, 17, 74-75, 76-77, 79-94; social, 30,44-47, 123 (See also socializing, spaces for); spatial, 8-9,30,88,118, 135n43 (See also eating spaces; hygiene, spaces for; sleeping spaces; socializing, spaces for) 179 prefabricated housing: combined and separate sanitary blocks in, 154nl7; eating spaces in, 78, 82-83,84-85, 94; hygiene spaces in, 99, 100,102, 104-5, 106-8, 110-11, 112 “Prevention and Elimination of Noise” (1969 Soviet law on sanitary norms), 46-47 privacy/private spaces: and eating spaces, 87, 90; hygienic, 97-98; in remodeling, 16, 28-29; semiprivate, 117-18, 122-25; sleeping space, 17,48, 65-66, 67-73; social, 117-18, 119,120,122-25,127 private property, 29, 60-61, 124, 136n51 privatization: of housing, 20, 22, 29, 34,60-61, 114,115-16, 118; oflabor, in remont, 34-38. See also ownership/homeowners quality of life, 2-3, 55. See also conditions of housing and living quality standards: comparative, of Baltic housing, 19; of hygiene-related spaces, 97-98, 99-100; in remont, 28-29, 30, 31, 35, 37-38,40-41, 45; of Soviet housing, 52-53. See also standards/standardization Rabotnitsa magazine, 23-24, 31-32, 33, 72, 80-81,84, 88 real estate market, 105-7, 115-16, 128-29 refrigerators, 78-79, 91,151n55 refugees, 36-37 regulations: construction, 23,24, 84-86, 114-15; for furniture, 90; GOST, 62, 90; Sanitary Norms and Regulations (SNiP), 24, 53-54,62, 78, 114-15; Soviet housing, 51,102-3. See also standards/standardization remont: comedic representations of, 30, 140nl3;
definition and evolution of, 27-30; demand for, 30, 38-44, 47; as domestic and social practice, 44-47; in popular sources, 31-34; post-Soviet, of bathrooms, 107-12; supply and experience oflabor in, 34-38 replanning (pereplanirovka): and combined sanitary blocks, 109-11; defined, 62; demand for construction and design services for, 43-44; in domestic remodeling, 1; and food-related spaces, 74-75, 83-84, 88-90; in popular media, 33-34; and sleeping spaces, 48, 62-66, 67-68, 70-71; and social space, 125-26; state absence in, 115-17; urban legends of, 116. See also layout, spatial representational spaces, 68,95-96,111-12 Residential Maintenance Offices (ZhEK). See Housing Maintenance Offices (ZhEK) resistance: everyday, 8, 9-10, 25; popular, to urban housing projects, 20-21, 22
180 INDEX respectability, 36-37,111-12,129-30 restrooms, public, 97-98 revenue houses, 49-50 ritual: domestic, 15-16; hygienic, 119-20; remodeling as, 128 routines: collapse of the USSR in changes to, 8-9; domestic, 15-16,67-73. See also byt Rudolf, Nicole, 11 Russian Federation, 5,20,22,40-41,129 Saint Petersburg, 12,49-50 sanitary blocks: in architectural fantasies and reality, 100-104; combined and separate, 95, 98-105,107,110-11,154nl7; and post-Soviet architects, 104-7; post-Soviet remont of, 107-12; visibility of, 95-98. See also hygiene, spaces for Sanitary Norms and Regulations (SNIP), 24, 53-54, 62, 78, 114-15 scale of change, everyday, 9-12 semiprivate spaces. See privacy/private spaces services, remodeling and construction, 1,16-17, 28-29, 34-37,43-44,130. See also interior design/designers shabashniki (private construction workers), 34-37. See also labor shame, 69,147n66 Sherbakov, Vladimir, 36 Shevchenko, Olga, 129 shortages: consumer and industrial, 2-3, 28-29, 83-84, 85,129-30; housing, 24,40, 50. See also supply/supply chains Siegelbaum, Lewis H.: Broad Is My Native Land, 35 single-family home construction, GDR, 114 sleeping spaces: in the twentieth century, 48-51; in apartment transformations, 8; in Khrushchev-era apartments, 41; postSoviet changes in, 67-73; in post-Soviet kitchen remodeling, 90-91; privacy in, 17; rise of bedrooms, 60-67; as social spaces, 119; transformation of, 17; in urban realities, 48. See also practices: domestic socialism: and housing infrastructure, 29-30; in narratives of the collapse of the USSR, 9-10; nostalgia for, 5-6; and
sleeping space, 66-67, 69-71, 72-73 socializing, spaces for: courtyards as, 122-23; eating-related spaces as, 17, 74-75, 79-83, 118-19; in everyday history and scale, 10-11; in functional interiors, 113; hallways in, 18, 120,123, 124; in the home, 117-22,125-26; multifunctionality of, 56,57,60,118,119-21; in post-Soviet kitchen remodeling, 90-91; post-Soviet replanning in, 125-26; semi private spaces as, 122-25; sleeping spaces as, 8, 57,66, 68; in Soviet identity, 126-27; and state absence, 114-17; in tracking shifts in social life, 18. See also entertainment; practices: domestic soft corners, 90-91 sounds/sonic impact of remont, 46-47 sources, 19, 23-25,30, 31-34 sovok, 4 stairwells, 123-24,125 standards/standardization: of apartment blocks and series, 12,13-14,18-19,84, 152n58; of everyday life, 25; of furniture, 12, 13, 15, 78, 90; GOST (Soviet technical standards), 62,90; of hygiene-related spaces, 97-98,99-100,111-12; in remont, 28-29, 30,31,35,37-38,40-41,45; Sanitary Norms and Regulations (SNiP), 24, 53-54,62, 78, 114-15; Soviet, 12-15, 52-53,62,90; Western and European, 1,5, 37-38,105-7. See also regulations State Committee of Construction. See Gosstroi (State Committee of Construction) state control, absence of, 114-17 status, socioeconomic, 1,66-67,98,111-12,129 Stea, David, 67 Stepanishev, V., 151n55 stereotyping, ethnic, 129 Stieber, Nancy, 10-11 stucco, dry, 61-62. See also drywall style: in post-Soviet identity, 129-31; Western, 37 supply/supply chains: and eating spaces, 83-84,85; economic reform in, 2-3; in remont, 28-29,30, 34-38, 40; and sleeping spaces,
50, 57; in style, 129-30 tables, 74, 75-79, 81-82,83,89-90,91-93,119, 120 Tajiks, 129 Tbilisi, 20 Technical Inventory, Bureau of (BTI), 12,115-16 technology, 36, 78-80 television, 19, 33-34,42-43,81,107,121-22,129 Thaw, The (Khrushchev), 3 Time of the Great Housewarming, The, 57 Tlostanova, Madina, 3 toilets/toilet rooms, 95-100,102-4, 109-11. See also hygiene, spaces for; sanitary blocks trade/trade policy, 2-3, 38 “transition” principle, 45-46 trends: kitchen culture as, 17,81; kitchen fur niture as, 90; labor migration in, 35-36; in
INDEX popular sources, 33-34, 95; remodeling as, 1; in sanitary blocks, 95, 105-7 Trifonov, Yuri: “Exchange,” 50-51, 57 “Tsena remonta” (Rabonitsa magazine), 31 Ukraine: diversity of housing in, 18; replanning documentation in, 115; Russian war and military crimes in, 131-32; size of family housing in, 55; traits of urban homes in, 20 Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, 60-61 United States, 88,118 Upton, Dell, 8,15-16 urban lore, 129 Varga-Harris, Christine, 96 ventilation, 137n68 vernacular architecture, 15-16,126-27 90-91; and the rise of the bedroom, 62, 63, 65-66; as social space, 120,121 walls. See partitions/partition walls washing machines, 107-11 water heaters, 99 Westernness/the West, 4-5, 29, 35-36,37, 97-98, 105-7,111-12 Window to Paris (Okno v Parizh), 4 women: and the domestic sphere, 23-24, 28-29, 31; kitchen technology and liberation of, 79; Soviet, in Rabonitsa magazine, 31; Soviet rhetoric on liberation of, 107-8 workspace: kitchens as, 76; and private sleeping space, 69 Wright, Gwendolyn, 12-13 youth socialization, 123,124 walk-through rooms: in daily personal rhythms, 68, 69, 72-73; in domestic practices, 16; multifunctionality of, 56, 57, 67-68; in post-Soviet kitchen remodeling, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek München 181 Zavisca, Jane, 6-7, 127 “Zona remonta” (Rabonitsa magazine), 31 zones, functional, 13, 14-15, 48-49, 126 |
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Contents List of Figures Acknowledgments Romanization Glossary Introduction ix xi xiii XV 1 1. Remodeling 27 2. Sleeping 48 3. Eating 74 4. Cleaning 95 5. Socializing 113 Conclusion: A Note on Time, Style, and the End of the Post-Soviet Era 128 Notes Bibliography Index 133 163 175
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Index Page numbers in italics indicate figures. “About Property” law (Ukrainian SSR, 1991), 60-61 “About the Development of Residential Construction in the USSR” decree (1957), 99 accountability, official, 31,38 activism, anti-construction in Kyiv, 20-21, 22 aesthetics: functionalist, of kitchens, 79, 81; of hygiene-related spaces, 96-97,98, 111; of paper architecture, 22-23; in remont, 29-30, 33,35-36,47; and sleep-related furniture, 57, 60-67 Afonia (1975), film, 96 allocation: ofhousing, 50, 51-52, 104-5, 114-15; of spatial functions, 56,66-67, 72-73, 120-21 amenities: in post-Soviet sanitary blocks, 104-5; shared, 50 apartment blocks, buildings, and series: bombing of, 131; individually designed, 84-85, 102-3, 105,106; post-Soviet, 105-7; pre-1917,12, 18-19, 38-40, 98-99, 138n87; sleeping space in, 53, 55, 56-57,62-66; standardized, 12, 13,18-19, 84,152n58; state of emergency in, 38-44. See also communal apartments; khrushchevka apartments architectural discourse: in demand for remont, 43; dining rooms in, 148-49n4; and reality, 22-23, 24-25, 100-104 Asquith, Lindsay, 15-16 Attfield, Judy, 2 avariinyi dom (building in precarious condition), 38-41 babushatnik (grandma’s den), 26 balconies, 20-21 barracks, 71,75, 144-45n4 basements, 123-24 bathhouses (bania), 119-20 bathrooms: in architectural fantasies and reality, 100-104; combined and separate, 98-100; and post-Soviet architects, 104-7; post-Soviet remont of, 107-12; visibility of. 95-98. See also hygiene, spaces for; sanitary blocks bedrooms: in domestic practice, 14-15; mean ings of, 8,48; numbers and bureaucracy in
designation of, 52-53, 55-57, 60; in private sleep, 68-71; replanning in isolation of, 71-73; rise of, 17, 60-67; as social space, 120-21,125-26; as twentieth-century sleeping space, 49-50. See also sleeping spaces beds, 56, 57, 65, 66-67,120-21 behaviors: abnormal, in bathrooms, 96; antisocial, and communal spaces, 76; changes in, 7 Benjamin, Walter, 27-28 bidets, 105-7 books on remodeling, 32 boundaries: for eating spaces, 93-94; on room functions, 15-16; of social spaces, 118; of Soviet normalcy, 5-6 Bourdieu, Pierre, 3 Boym Svetlana, 27-28, 39, 81, 97 Brezhnev, Leonid/Brezhnev-era (1964-1982), 55,81 Buchli, Victor, 57, 148-49n4 building codes: and kitchens, 78, 84-86; and sanitary blocks, 99-100,104,108-10,156n5O; Sanitary Norms and Regulations (SNIP), 24, 53-54,62,78, 114-15 Bulakh, Tatiana, 45-46 Bulgakov, Mikhail: Heart of a Dog, 52-53 Burda Moden magazine, 19, 24, 31-32 bureaucracy, 33-34, 51-60. See also building codes; Gosstroi (State Committee of Construction); Sanitary Norms and Regulations (SNiP) byt (everyday life), 39, 57, 102 capital reconstruction, 40-41, 143n61 cast-in-place concrete construction, 105 celebrations, 77, 80-82, 83, 119 censorship and kitchen culture, 94,119 Certeau, Michel de, 8-9 175
176 INDEX choice: aesthetic, for bathrooms, 96-97; aes thetic, for remont, 33; in post-Soviet style, 130; of products, in the rise of the bedroom, 66-67 Cieraad, Irene, 88 class, socioeconomic: in differences in domestic life, 12-13; kitchen remodels as indicator of, 88; mortgages as signifier of, 128; and remodeling in post-Soviet identity, 25-26 Cohen, Lizabeth, 15-16 collectivity in sleeping space, 69-71,72-73 Collier, Stephen, 13,29-30 comfort: in eating-related spaces, 74, 76, 81, 82, 89, 91, 92-93; in hygiene-related spaces, 96, 99, 100, 102-3, 108-10, 111-12; as remodeling goal, 41-42; in sleep-related spaces, 71,72-73 commodities/commodification: access to, in home improvement, 31-32, 35-36, 38, 43-44, 126-27; and hygiene-related spaces, 95-96; in remont, 27, 28-29, 44; and the rise of the bedroom, 66-67 commonalities, 12-13 commonalities of multiunit buildings, 33 communal apartments: dilapidated state of, in demand for remont, 38-41; eating-related spaces in, 75-76, 149n5; in everyday history and scale, 10; sanitary blocks in, 95, 97, 98-99; sleeping spaces in, 49-51, 52-53; standardization of, 12, 13, 18-19; in Ukraine, 18 compaction (uplotnenie), 50, 51-52, 75-76 competitions, architectural, 24-25, 43, 56, 58-59, 103 conditions of housing and living: absentee state in, 114; in kitchen culture, 80-81; post-Soviet, 1, 4, 7, 10, 26, 131; in remont, 29, 30, 38-42, 43,45, 47; and residential mobility, 129; and sleeping spaces, 48, 50,52-53, 61; and social spaces, 121-22 conflicts, 3, 36-37, 44, 47, 76 Constructivists/Constructivism, 13,22-23, 49-50, 149n5 consumer
goods/consumerism: changes in patterns of, 6; demand for, in post-Soviet construction, 114-15; economic reforms in, 2-3; and post-Soviet bathroom remont, 111-12; in post-Soviet identity, 45-46, 127; in remont, 28-29, 38,42-43,45-46, 47, 111-12; in sleeping space, 57, 66-67; style in, 129-30 continuities: in construction regulations, 114-15; in domestic practices, 16; in post-Soviet sanitary blocks, 105; of remont, 29-30, 44; spatial, in everyday life, 2,6-7 cooperatives, 34-35, 61, 85,91, 99-100 couches, 50-51, 56, 57,65, 66-67,90-93, 120-21 courtyards, 18, 122-24 Cromley, Elizabeth, 7, 15-16,93 culture: consumerist, in the rise of the bedroom, 66-67; kitchens in, 17, 79,81,119; mortgages in, 128; in post-Soviet identity, 4, 25; remodeling in, 1,16-17,29, 30,47; revolutionary change in, 11; stairwells in, 123-24; visual, sanitary blocks in, 95-98 damage, structural, 116-17 Deleuze, Gilles, 11 demand: consumer, in post-Soviet construc tion, 114-15; current, for remodeling, 128; for kitchen technology, 79-80; for labor, 28-29, 30, 34-38, 105-7; perestroika in, 2-3; in remont, 30, 38-44,47; Soviet realities in roots of, 16-17 dining rooms, 52-53, 75-79, 87,89-90,119, 148-49n4. See also eating spaces distribution of housing, 6-7, 51-53, 55, 75-76 diversity of homes, 11-12,18 documentation of replanning, post-Soviet, 115-17 “Domashnii kaleidoscop” (Rabonitsa maga zine), 31-32 Dom V kotorom ia zhivu (The house I live in, 1957), 79-80 “Dorn v kotorom my zhivem” (Rabonitsa magazine), 31-32 doors: for bedrooms and private sleeping spaces, 64-65, 66,68, 69, 72; in creating social
spaces, 117-18,124,125; in regulation Soviet kitchens, 85-86; in replanning sanitary blocks, 109-11 Dostoevsky, Fedor: Crime and Punishment, 49-50 drywall, 36, 61-62. See also materials, con struction; partitions/partition walls eating spaces: as favorite spaces in everyday life, 93-94; late-Soviet food spaces, 79-83; post-Soviet kitchens, 83-93; as social spaces, 17, 74-75, 79-83, 118-19; tables, 74, 75-79, 81-82, 83, 89-93; transformation of, 17. See also dining rooms; food; kitchens; practices: domestic economy: centralized, socialist, 4; collapse of, in supply, 34-35, 36-37; economic crisis, 2-3, 36-37, 129; economic reform and liberaliza-
INDEX tion, 2-3, 83-84,85; informal, 66-67, 115; post-1991 downshift in, and remont, 44-45; Soviet, in product distribution, 62, 81-82 Egmond, Horike, 9-10 elderly persons, social spaces for, 123 elites: housing of, in demand for remont, 41-43; sanitary blocks for, 96, 102-3 entertainment, 55-56, 57, 72-73, 89, 91-92, 121-22. See also socializing, spaces for “eternal remont,” 45-46 evroremont (Euro-remodeling), 1, 5, 37, 130, 140П13 expatriates, Western, 43-44, 105-7 Fehérvâry, Krisztina, 5, 47, 88,95, 111-12 films, 19, 42-43, 79-80, 96. See also under film title fixtures, 78-79, 80, 97-98, 105-7 floor area: of eating spaces, 41-42, 79, 80-81, 82-83, 84-85, 91-92, 94; in popular sources on remont, 31-34; liberalization of state control over, 114-15; of sanitary blocks, 99-100, 104-7, 108-10,111-12; of sleeping spaces, 48-49, 51-60,65; standardization of, 18-19 food, 17, 74-75, 76-77, 79-94. See also dining rooms; eating spaces; kitchens Foot, John, 9-10 frugality, Soviet, 55, 78, 99, 108-9 functionality: of eating spaces, 76-78,79-80, 81, 82-83, 84-85, 87, 90-91, 92-94; and hygienic spaces, 104; к = n - 1 formula in, 148-49n4; and remont, 40-41, 47; of sleeping spaces and furniture, 17, 48-49, 50-51, 52-53,55-60, 66-68, 72-73; of social spaces, 57, 113, 118,119-21, 124,126; of Soviet rooms and furniture, 13-16 furniture: convertible, 57, 60, 65, 66-67, 120-21; for eating-related spaces, 74, 75-79, 81-82, 83, 85, 89-93, 119, 120; in post-Soviet kitchen remodeling, 90-93; for sleep-related spaces, 55-57, 58-60,65, 66-67; standards for, 12, 13, 15, 78,90 Fürst, Juliane, 5-6
gatherings, social, 79-82, 91-92, 119, 120-22, 124-25 gender, 22 generations, familial: in need for multiple sanitary blocks, 102-3; sleeping space for, 52, 63, 65,66,68-69, 72-73, 146-47n50; social space for, 123 gentrification, 61 geographies, 18-22 177 Gerasimova, Ekaterina, 29 German Democratic Republic, 114 glasnost, 2 Goffman, Erving, 4 Golubev, Alexey, 122-24 Gorbachev, Mikhail, 2-3 Gosstroi (State Committee of Construction), 40,43, 53, 56, 84-85, 103, 116-17 GOST (Soviet technical standards), 62, 90 Great Britain, postwar, 118 Guattari, Felix, 11 habitus (social dispositions), 3,29, 30,44,45,47 hallways, 18, 90-91,120, 123, 124 Harris, Steven, 41 hierarchies, 95, 129 history, everyday, 9-12 Home Academy Volume I, 32 homelessness, 29, 124 Housing Code of the Russian Federative SSR, 52 Housing Maintenance Offices (ZhEK), 31,35, 115-16 housing stock, 6-7, 12,18, 88, 115-16, 148n3 Houzz domestic design portal, 119 Hungary, 88 hygiene, spaces for: in architectural fantasies and reality, 100-104; combined and separate, 98-104,107, 110-11, 154nl7; late-Soviet, in images, 96-97; in post-Soviet architecture, 104-7; post-Soviet remont of, 107-12; as social spaces, 119-20. See also bathrooms; sanitary blocks hysteresis (discrepancy in social dispositions), 3 Idei vashego doma post-Soviet media outlet, 24, 33, 64, 65, 91 identity, post-Soviet, 1, 3, 4-5, 25-27, 47, 126-27, 129-31 liul’skii dozhd’ (July rain, 1966), 79-80 Hid, Melanie, 136-37n64 imports, 4, 37,43, 66-67, 85, 97-98. See also evroremont (Euro-remodeling) improved plan apartments, 41-42, 82-83,84,91 income, 36-37,
49-50, 61, 67-68 inequality, economic, 66-67, 68 infrastructure, 12-13, 29-30,105, 122-24,127 interior design/designers, 1, 5, 19, 31-34, 43-44,85. See also services, remodeling and construction Invisible Revolution, 11 Irony of Fate, The (Ironiia sud'by, 1975), 42-43, 96 Jordan, Jennifer, 82
178 INDEX Kabakov, Ilia and Emilia: The Toilet, 97 Khrushchev, Nikita, 3,4, 55, 113 khrushchevka apartments: demand for remont of, 41-43; eating-related spaces in, 41-42, 76-77; replanning of, 62-66, 126; Russian invasion of Ukraine in destruction of, 131-32; size of, 41-42, 55-56, 82-83; sleeping spaces in, 50-51, 55-57,62-66; social spaces in, 126 Kitchen Debate, 1959, 78-79 kitchens: in late-Soviet homes, 79-83; in politics, 17, 79, 81, 94,119; post-Soviet, 83-94; size of, 41-42, 79, 91-92,94; as social spaces, 82, 119; space from, for sanitary blocks, 102; as utilitarian workspace, 76; washing machines in, 108-9. See also eating spaces; food k=n- 1 formula, 51-53, 55-56, 60-61, 75-76, 148-49n4 Knauf Gips, 36,62 Krasivye kvartiry (Beautiful apartments) magazine, 33 Kvartirnyi vopros (Apartment question), 19, 24 Kyiv, Ukraine, 18, 20, 22, 37 labor: domestic, and kitchens, 76-77,149nl4; ethnic stereotyping of, 129; gendered, 23-24; in the rise of the bedroom, 62; supply and demand in availability of, 28-29, 30, 34-38, 105-7 layout, spatial: of eating spaces, 74-75, 76-77, 78, 84-85, 86-89; of hygienic spaces, 100-101; in media on remodeling, 33-34; remont in, 47; of sleeping space, 48-49, 55-57, 59,62,67-73; of social space, 115, 120-21; standardization of, 12-15. See also evroremont (Euro-remodeling); replanning (pereplanirovka) Lefebvre, Henri: Rhythmanalysis, 72 Leinarte, Dalia, 136-37n64 Lenin, Vladimir, 51-53 liberalization, economic, 2-3, 85 living conditions. See conditions of housing and living living rooms/spaces: and eating spaces, 74, 80-81, 87, 88-92, 93-94;
floor space for, in demand for remont, 41-42; post-Soviet emergence of, 125-26; and sleeping space, 55-56, 64-65, 66,69, 70-71; as social space, 118, 120,121-22 Lviv, Ukraine, 12, 18, 20,21 magazines, 19, 31-32, 33. See also under magazine title maintenance, 29, 30, 33-34, 40, 95,98-99 Mason, Peter, 9-10 mass housing: in the Baltic Soviet republics, 19; eating-related spaces in, 76-77; as modern, 16; remont as habitus in, 29; sleeping spaces in, 50-51, 55, 57; social findings in, 126-27; social spaces in, 121-23; standardization in, 13-14. See also khrushchevka apartments materiality, 8-9,66-67 materials, construction: in popular sources, 31-32; in post-Soviet style and evroremont, 130; in the rise of the bedroom, 61-62; supply and demand in remont, 35-36,38,43-44 media: food-related spaces in, 93; hygienerelated spaces in, 96-98; remont in, 31-34; replanning in, 64; as sources, 23-24 memorabilia, 81 Merzhanov, Boris, 57, 100-102,120 mobility: of labor, 30, 35-37; residential, 63, 129-30; social, 42 Moch, Leslie Page: Broad Is My Native Land, 35 models, spatial, 25-26, 83-84 Modernism, 12, 76-78, 79-80, 89,113,118, 122-23 modernization: architectural competitions in, 56,58-59; in post-Soviet discourses of normalcy, 5-6; in post-Soviet kitchen remodeling, 89; and remont, 31, 41; replanning for social space as, 126; and social spaces, 113, 114 Moldovans, 129 mortgage markets, 128 Moscow, 20, 22, 27-28, 94,124 Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears (Moskva slezam ne verit, 1981) film, 42-43,96 Moscow Scientific-Research and Project Institute of Typology and Experimental Design
(MNIITEP), 43-44 Moskoff, William, 40 multi/mono-functionality: of eating spaces, 78, 82-83, 84-85, 90-91, 92-94; of furniture in Soviet architecture, 13-15; k=n-1 formula in, 148-49n4; of sleeping spaces and furniture, 8,48-49, 50-51, 52-53, 55-57, 58-60, 65,66,67-68; of social spaces, 56,58,60,118,119-21. See also functionality Narkomfin apartment building, 149n5 Nasha Rasha (Our Russia) television show, 129 neoliberalism, 29-30 New byt apartment buildings, 102 noise of remodeling, 46-47 normalcy, post-Soviet, 5-6,26
INDEX norms: in acceptable sound levels, 46-47; in apartment size, 51, 53, 55, 104-5; in communal bathrooms, 96; formal changes to, in remont, 34-35; GOST, 62,90; in kitchen design, 78, 84-85; and sanitary blocks, 79-80, 99-100, 104-5; SNiP, 24, 53-54, 62, 78, 114-15; social, in the rise of the bedroom, 67 nostalgia, 5-6 nouveau riche, 43-44, 61,98 numbers. See floor area Ob individualnoi trudovoi deiatel’nosti (About individual labor activity) law, 34-35 objects, material, 5,66-67,129-30 1-447 apartment series, 62, 87 open apartment plans, 33, 63-64, 67, 86-89, 118, 125-26 Operatsiia У i drugie prikliucheniia Shurika (Operation Y and Shurik’s other adventures, 1965), 60 organization, spatial. See layout, spatial ownership/homeowners, 10, 20,22,46-47, 105, 115-17, 129, 136n51. See also privatization P-44 apartment housing series, 33, 104-5 panel apartments, 33, 57, 100, 102,116-17 panels, prefabricated, 12, 84-85 Papernyi, Vladimir: KuTtura Dva, 52-53 parking, 122-23 partitions/partition walls: in combining sanitary blocks, 110-11; demand for, 38-39; in domestic practices, 15-16; in kitchen remodeling, 86-87, 88-89; in popular sources on remont, 32-33,38; and sleeping spaces, 48-49,61-62; and social spaces, 115, 116-17, 125-26. See also drywall Patico, Jennifer, 25-26 People’s Commissariat of Healthcare, 51 pereplanirovka (replanning). See replanning (pereplanirovka) perestroika, 2-3, 5-6,9, 72, 83-84, 97-98, 126-27 politics: in everyday history, 9-12; of housing, in sleeping space, 48-49; kitchens in, 17, 79, 81, 94,119; of perestroika, 2; post-Soviet, 5; in remont, 29-30;
social spaces in, 117 popular culture, 26,42-43 practices: domestic, 8-9,13,15-16, 44-47; food-related, 17, 74-75, 76-77, 79-94; social, 30,44-47, 123 (See also socializing, spaces for); spatial, 8-9,30,88,118, 135n43 (See also eating spaces; hygiene, spaces for; sleeping spaces; socializing, spaces for) 179 prefabricated housing: combined and separate sanitary blocks in, 154nl7; eating spaces in, 78, 82-83,84-85, 94; hygiene spaces in, 99, 100,102, 104-5, 106-8, 110-11, 112 “Prevention and Elimination of Noise” (1969 Soviet law on sanitary norms), 46-47 privacy/private spaces: and eating spaces, 87, 90; hygienic, 97-98; in remodeling, 16, 28-29; semiprivate, 117-18, 122-25; sleeping space, 17,48, 65-66, 67-73; social, 117-18, 119,120,122-25,127 private property, 29, 60-61, 124, 136n51 privatization: of housing, 20, 22, 29, 34,60-61, 114,115-16, 118; oflabor, in remont, 34-38. See also ownership/homeowners quality of life, 2-3, 55. See also conditions of housing and living quality standards: comparative, of Baltic housing, 19; of hygiene-related spaces, 97-98, 99-100; in remont, 28-29, 30, 31, 35, 37-38,40-41, 45; of Soviet housing, 52-53. See also standards/standardization Rabotnitsa magazine, 23-24, 31-32, 33, 72, 80-81,84, 88 real estate market, 105-7, 115-16, 128-29 refrigerators, 78-79, 91,151n55 refugees, 36-37 regulations: construction, 23,24, 84-86, 114-15; for furniture, 90; GOST, 62, 90; Sanitary Norms and Regulations (SNiP), 24, 53-54,62, 78, 114-15; Soviet housing, 51,102-3. See also standards/standardization remont: comedic representations of, 30, 140nl3;
definition and evolution of, 27-30; demand for, 30, 38-44, 47; as domestic and social practice, 44-47; in popular sources, 31-34; post-Soviet, of bathrooms, 107-12; supply and experience oflabor in, 34-38 replanning (pereplanirovka): and combined sanitary blocks, 109-11; defined, 62; demand for construction and design services for, 43-44; in domestic remodeling, 1; and food-related spaces, 74-75, 83-84, 88-90; in popular media, 33-34; and sleeping spaces, 48, 62-66, 67-68, 70-71; and social space, 125-26; state absence in, 115-17; urban legends of, 116. See also layout, spatial representational spaces, 68,95-96,111-12 Residential Maintenance Offices (ZhEK). See Housing Maintenance Offices (ZhEK) resistance: everyday, 8, 9-10, 25; popular, to urban housing projects, 20-21, 22
180 INDEX respectability, 36-37,111-12,129-30 restrooms, public, 97-98 revenue houses, 49-50 ritual: domestic, 15-16; hygienic, 119-20; remodeling as, 128 routines: collapse of the USSR in changes to, 8-9; domestic, 15-16,67-73. See also byt Rudolf, Nicole, 11 Russian Federation, 5,20,22,40-41,129 Saint Petersburg, 12,49-50 sanitary blocks: in architectural fantasies and reality, 100-104; combined and separate, 95, 98-105,107,110-11,154nl7; and post-Soviet architects, 104-7; post-Soviet remont of, 107-12; visibility of, 95-98. See also hygiene, spaces for Sanitary Norms and Regulations (SNIP), 24, 53-54, 62, 78, 114-15 scale of change, everyday, 9-12 semiprivate spaces. See privacy/private spaces services, remodeling and construction, 1,16-17, 28-29, 34-37,43-44,130. See also interior design/designers shabashniki (private construction workers), 34-37. See also labor shame, 69,147n66 Sherbakov, Vladimir, 36 Shevchenko, Olga, 129 shortages: consumer and industrial, 2-3, 28-29, 83-84, 85,129-30; housing, 24,40, 50. See also supply/supply chains Siegelbaum, Lewis H.: Broad Is My Native Land, 35 single-family home construction, GDR, 114 sleeping spaces: in the twentieth century, 48-51; in apartment transformations, 8; in Khrushchev-era apartments, 41; postSoviet changes in, 67-73; in post-Soviet kitchen remodeling, 90-91; privacy in, 17; rise of bedrooms, 60-67; as social spaces, 119; transformation of, 17; in urban realities, 48. See also practices: domestic socialism: and housing infrastructure, 29-30; in narratives of the collapse of the USSR, 9-10; nostalgia for, 5-6; and
sleeping space, 66-67, 69-71, 72-73 socializing, spaces for: courtyards as, 122-23; eating-related spaces as, 17, 74-75, 79-83, 118-19; in everyday history and scale, 10-11; in functional interiors, 113; hallways in, 18, 120,123, 124; in the home, 117-22,125-26; multifunctionality of, 56,57,60,118,119-21; in post-Soviet kitchen remodeling, 90-91; post-Soviet replanning in, 125-26; semi private spaces as, 122-25; sleeping spaces as, 8, 57,66, 68; in Soviet identity, 126-27; and state absence, 114-17; in tracking shifts in social life, 18. See also entertainment; practices: domestic soft corners, 90-91 sounds/sonic impact of remont, 46-47 sources, 19, 23-25,30, 31-34 sovok, 4 stairwells, 123-24,125 standards/standardization: of apartment blocks and series, 12,13-14,18-19,84, 152n58; of everyday life, 25; of furniture, 12, 13, 15, 78, 90; GOST (Soviet technical standards), 62,90; of hygiene-related spaces, 97-98,99-100,111-12; in remont, 28-29, 30,31,35,37-38,40-41,45; Sanitary Norms and Regulations (SNiP), 24, 53-54,62, 78, 114-15; Soviet, 12-15, 52-53,62,90; Western and European, 1,5, 37-38,105-7. See also regulations State Committee of Construction. See Gosstroi (State Committee of Construction) state control, absence of, 114-17 status, socioeconomic, 1,66-67,98,111-12,129 Stea, David, 67 Stepanishev, V., 151n55 stereotyping, ethnic, 129 Stieber, Nancy, 10-11 stucco, dry, 61-62. See also drywall style: in post-Soviet identity, 129-31; Western, 37 supply/supply chains: and eating spaces, 83-84,85; economic reform in, 2-3; in remont, 28-29,30, 34-38, 40; and sleeping spaces,
50, 57; in style, 129-30 tables, 74, 75-79, 81-82,83,89-90,91-93,119, 120 Tajiks, 129 Tbilisi, 20 Technical Inventory, Bureau of (BTI), 12,115-16 technology, 36, 78-80 television, 19, 33-34,42-43,81,107,121-22,129 Thaw, The (Khrushchev), 3 Time of the Great Housewarming, The, 57 Tlostanova, Madina, 3 toilets/toilet rooms, 95-100,102-4, 109-11. See also hygiene, spaces for; sanitary blocks trade/trade policy, 2-3, 38 “transition” principle, 45-46 trends: kitchen culture as, 17,81; kitchen fur niture as, 90; labor migration in, 35-36; in
INDEX popular sources, 33-34, 95; remodeling as, 1; in sanitary blocks, 95, 105-7 Trifonov, Yuri: “Exchange,” 50-51, 57 “Tsena remonta” (Rabonitsa magazine), 31 Ukraine: diversity of housing in, 18; replanning documentation in, 115; Russian war and military crimes in, 131-32; size of family housing in, 55; traits of urban homes in, 20 Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, 60-61 United States, 88,118 Upton, Dell, 8,15-16 urban lore, 129 Varga-Harris, Christine, 96 ventilation, 137n68 vernacular architecture, 15-16,126-27 90-91; and the rise of the bedroom, 62, 63, 65-66; as social space, 120,121 walls. See partitions/partition walls washing machines, 107-11 water heaters, 99 Westernness/the West, 4-5, 29, 35-36,37, 97-98, 105-7,111-12 Window to Paris (Okno v Parizh), 4 women: and the domestic sphere, 23-24, 28-29, 31; kitchen technology and liberation of, 79; Soviet, in Rabonitsa magazine, 31; Soviet rhetoric on liberation of, 107-8 workspace: kitchens as, 76; and private sleeping space, 69 Wright, Gwendolyn, 12-13 youth socialization, 123,124 walk-through rooms: in daily personal rhythms, 68, 69, 72-73; in domestic practices, 16; multifunctionality of, 56, 57, 67-68; in post-Soviet kitchen remodeling, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek München 181 Zavisca, Jane, 6-7, 127 “Zona remonta” (Rabonitsa magazine), 31 zones, functional, 13, 14-15, 48-49, 126 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Malaia, Kateryna 1988- |
author_GND | (DE-588)1308163134 |
author_facet | Malaia, Kateryna 1988- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Malaia, Kateryna 1988- |
author_variant | k m km |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV049104397 |
classification_rvk | LO 80170 LO 80210 NQ 8294 NQ 8286 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)1393145129 (DE-599)BVBBV049104397 |
discipline | Kunstgeschichte Geschichte |
era | Geschichte 1980-2000 gnd |
era_facet | Geschichte 1980-2000 |
format | Book |
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geographic | Ukraine (DE-588)4061496-7 gnd Sowjetunion (DE-588)4077548-3 gnd Russland (DE-588)4076899-5 gnd |
geographic_facet | Ukraine Sowjetunion Russland |
id | DE-604.BV049104397 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T22:33:32Z |
indexdate | 2025-01-10T17:07:51Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781501771200 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-034365865 |
oclc_num | 1393145129 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-Re13 DE-BY-UBR DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-Re13 DE-BY-UBR DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-188 |
physical | xvii, 181 Seiten Illustrationen, Pläne |
psigel | BSB_NED_20230920 |
publishDate | 2023 |
publishDateSearch | 2023 |
publishDateSort | 2023 |
publisher | Northern Illinois University Press |
record_format | marc |
series2 | NIU Series in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies |
spelling | Malaia, Kateryna 1988- Verfasser (DE-588)1308163134 aut Taking the Soviet Union apart room by room domestic architecture before and after 1991 Kateryna Malaia Ithaca ; London Northern Illinois University Press 2023 xvii, 181 Seiten Illustrationen, Pläne txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier NIU Series in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies Geschichte 1980-2000 gnd rswk-swf Innenarchitektur (DE-588)4072819-5 gnd rswk-swf Wohnung (DE-588)4066768-6 gnd rswk-swf Soziale Identität (DE-588)4077567-7 gnd rswk-swf Sozioökonomischer Wandel (DE-588)4318539-3 gnd rswk-swf Wohnraum (DE-588)4241423-4 gnd rswk-swf Architektur (DE-588)4002851-3 gnd rswk-swf Ukraine (DE-588)4061496-7 gnd rswk-swf Sowjetunion (DE-588)4077548-3 gnd rswk-swf Russland (DE-588)4076899-5 gnd rswk-swf Sowjetunion (DE-588)4077548-3 g Ukraine (DE-588)4061496-7 g Russland (DE-588)4076899-5 g Sozioökonomischer Wandel (DE-588)4318539-3 s Wohnraum (DE-588)4241423-4 s Wohnung (DE-588)4066768-6 s Architektur (DE-588)4002851-3 s Innenarchitektur (DE-588)4072819-5 s Soziale Identität (DE-588)4077567-7 s Geschichte 1980-2000 z DE-604 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, EPUB 9781501771224 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, PDF 9781501771217 Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034365865&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034365865&sequence=000003&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Literaturverzeichnis Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034365865&sequence=000005&line_number=0003&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Register // Gemischte Register |
spellingShingle | Malaia, Kateryna 1988- Taking the Soviet Union apart room by room domestic architecture before and after 1991 Innenarchitektur (DE-588)4072819-5 gnd Wohnung (DE-588)4066768-6 gnd Soziale Identität (DE-588)4077567-7 gnd Sozioökonomischer Wandel (DE-588)4318539-3 gnd Wohnraum (DE-588)4241423-4 gnd Architektur (DE-588)4002851-3 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4072819-5 (DE-588)4066768-6 (DE-588)4077567-7 (DE-588)4318539-3 (DE-588)4241423-4 (DE-588)4002851-3 (DE-588)4061496-7 (DE-588)4077548-3 (DE-588)4076899-5 |
title | Taking the Soviet Union apart room by room domestic architecture before and after 1991 |
title_auth | Taking the Soviet Union apart room by room domestic architecture before and after 1991 |
title_exact_search | Taking the Soviet Union apart room by room domestic architecture before and after 1991 |
title_exact_search_txtP | Taking the Soviet Union apart room by room domestic architecture before and after 1991 |
title_full | Taking the Soviet Union apart room by room domestic architecture before and after 1991 Kateryna Malaia |
title_fullStr | Taking the Soviet Union apart room by room domestic architecture before and after 1991 Kateryna Malaia |
title_full_unstemmed | Taking the Soviet Union apart room by room domestic architecture before and after 1991 Kateryna Malaia |
title_short | Taking the Soviet Union apart room by room |
title_sort | taking the soviet union apart room by room domestic architecture before and after 1991 |
title_sub | domestic architecture before and after 1991 |
topic | Innenarchitektur (DE-588)4072819-5 gnd Wohnung (DE-588)4066768-6 gnd Soziale Identität (DE-588)4077567-7 gnd Sozioökonomischer Wandel (DE-588)4318539-3 gnd Wohnraum (DE-588)4241423-4 gnd Architektur (DE-588)4002851-3 gnd |
topic_facet | Innenarchitektur Wohnung Soziale Identität Sozioökonomischer Wandel Wohnraum Architektur Ukraine Sowjetunion Russland |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034365865&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=034365865&sequence=000003&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=034365865&sequence=000005&line_number=0003&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT malaiakateryna takingthesovietunionapartroombyroomdomesticarchitecturebeforeandafter1991 |