Acknowledgments
1. The Pleasures of Backwardness / Zsuzsa Gille, Cristofer
Scarboro, and Diana Mincytė
2. Consuming Dialogues: Pleasure, Restraint, "Backwardness," and
"Civilization" in Eastern Europe / Mary Neuburger
3. Just Rewards: The Social Contract and Communism's Hard Bargain
with the Citizen-Consumer / Patrick Hyder Patterson
4. Conceptualizing Consumption in the Polish People's Republic /
Brian Porter-Szűcs
5. Oranges and the New Black: Importing, Provisioning, and
Consuming Tropical Fruits and Coffee in the GDR, 1971–1989 / Anne
Dietrich
6. VCRs, Modernity, and Consumer Culture in Late State Socialist
Poland / Patryk Wasiak
7. The Enchantment of Imaginary Europe: Consumer Practices in
Post-Soviet Ukraine / Tania Bulakh
8. The Late Socialist Good Life and its Discontents: Bit, Kultura,
and the Social Life of Goods / Cristofer Scarboro
9. The Prosumerist Resonance Machine: Rethinking Political
Subjectivity and Consumer Desire in State Socialism / Zsuzsa Gille
and Diana Mincytė
Index
Cristofer Scarboro is Professor of History at King's College in
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. He is author of The Late Socialist Good
Life in Bulgaria: Living and Meaning in a Permanent Present
Tense.
Diana Mincytė is Associate Professor of Sociology at the City
University of New York–New York City College of Technology.
Zsuzsa Gille is Professor of Sociology and Director of Global
Studies at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She is
author of Paprika, Foie Gras, and Red Mud: The Politics of
Materiality in the European Union and From the Cult of Waste to the
Trash Heap of History: The Politics of Waste in Socialist and
Postsocialist Hungary, which received honorable mention for the
ASEEES Davis Center Book Prize; editor (with Maria Todorova) of
Post-Communist Nostalgia; and co-author of Global Ethnography:
Forces, Connections and Imaginations in a Postmodern World.
"The Socialist Good Life is a first-class, rigorously researched,
richly documented, and thought-provoking book, which will make a
significant contribution to scholarship in its field."—Graham H.
Roberts, author of Material Culture in Russia and the USSR: Things
Values, Identities
"The time is ripe for this volume of essays, given climate change,
escalating socio-economic inequalities, and now the radical effects
of the novel coronavirus. These studies offer a nuanced picture of
the modern "good life" that emerged in state-socialist Eastern
Europe, with new perspectives on its successes and failures. There
are surprises here. Who would have predicted the convergence among
economists in east and west on supply-side theory by the 1970s?
There are also provocations. Practices we might consider desirable
today arose, ironically, from what were understood at the time as
the failures of state-socialist consumer regimes: reuse and
recycling, D.I.Y. skills for adapting, repairing and caring for the
mass-produced goods available. In the years ahead, we may have much
to learn from this exploration of the state-socialist
experience."—Krisztina Fehervary, author of Politics in Color and
Concrete: Socialist Materialities and the Middle Class in
Hungary
"This trailblazing book examines the achievements and real
pleasures of the socialist good life. Mobilizing their deep
knowledge of state socialist Eastern Europe, the authors upend our
assumptions and offer us new coordinates for understanding
consumption, politics, and the good life. They question how
socialist consumption has been measured and ask whether it had any
relation to a 'social contract,' whether it resulted in consumerist
apathy, and whether it may have, in fact, escaped alienation and
offered a missed post-materialist future."—Johanna Bockman, author
of Markets in the Name of Socialism
"This is a thought-provoking and enlightening, if in places
frustrating, collection of interdisciplinary essays that will be of
benefit to social scientists interested in consumer lifeworlds
under communist rule."—Gediminas Lankauskas, University of Regina,
The Russian Review
"The volume is a useful study of Eastern European consumption
during socialism and an invaluable tool with which to think about
writing the histories of consumerism and state socialism in
general. The provocative conclusions regarding socialism's failures
as reverse echoes of our world today, with its own tortured
relation to consumption, should, one hopes, resonate beyond the
confines of the fields of Eastern European and socialist
history."—Victor Petrov - University of Tennessee, H-Net
(Socialisms)
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