The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was a place that really existed,
but it is long dead. By now, the word "Soviet" should be as meaningless
as "Hapsburg". Yet it endures, as in the wave of "de-communisation" in
Ukraine or the strange idea that the capitalist government in Russia is
"Communist".
But does the Soviet experience have anything to
teach us today, or was it just an enormous cul-de-sac, a nuclear-armed
reincarnation of the Russian Empire? This book tries to find out,
through walking the towns and great cities of the USSR, in an itinerary
that goes from the Baltic to Belarus, from Ukraine to the Urals, from
the Caucasus to Central Asia, in places ranging from utopian colonies of
the Twenties, to nuclear new towns of the Fifties, to gleaming new
capitals of the 21st century.Ranging across eleven of the fifteen
countries that once made up the Soviet Union, this book searches for the
remnants of revolutions both distant and recent. and for the
continuities with the Communist idea. Instead of a wistful journey
through ruins, this is a Marxist Humanist account of how cities and
their inhabitants have tried to cope both with the end of a socialist
dream and the failure of capitalism to fulfill its own promises.
In this patchwork of EU democracies, neoliberal dictatorships and
Soviet nostalgic enclaves (often found in the same countries) we might
just find the outlines of a way of building and living in cities that is
a powerful alternative, both in the past and present.
The Adventures of Owen Hatherley in the Post-Soviet Space - Owen Hatherley
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