The Pleasures of Backwardness: Consumer Desire and Modernity in Eastern Europe

The Pleasures of Backwardness: Consumer Desire and Modernity in Eastern Europe

Veranstalter
University of California, Berkeley
Veranstaltungsort
Ort
Berkeley
Land
United States
Vom - Bis
23.04.2015 - 25.04.2015
Deadline
31.10.2014
Website
Von
Aleksandra Polkowska, Interdisziplinäre Polenstudien, Europa Universität Viadrina

Consumption has recently emerged as a prism through which to view the cultural and social history of Eastern Europe from an exciting new angle. Especially in the study of life under state socialism, the emphasis on consumer practices has led scholars to rethink familiar themes such as human agency and personal autonomy, the grey zone between official and unofficial cultures and the relationship between Western capitalist modernity and the “shortage economies” of the East. Light has also been shed on the many forms of consumption—smoking, drinking, tourism, music, sport and much else—that reflect and drive political change in the region. Whether scrutinizing TV viewing in Czechoslovakia or the enjoyment of tobacco in Bulgaria, hitchhiking through Poland or Budapest nightlife, scholars present consumption as an expression of everyday agency and the creative potential of ordinary people.

This conference will bring together junior and senior scholars to examine the place of consumption, entertainment and leisure in Eastern Europe and to explore the implications of the latest consumer studies for the region’s wider history. Not only in state socialism did consumption lend flexibility and creativity to a system commonly thought of as stagnant and stultified. In what ways can the consumer perspective change our understanding of development, politics and power in the region over the centuries? How does a focus on the lives of consumers illuminate Eastern engagement with the West over the long term, not just during the cold war? Does attention to the rise of consumption in the East problematize Western narratives of consumerism and modernization? Were consumer cultures of the East mere imitations of a more developed West, or were there pleasures of backwardness peculiar to the region?

Ten participants and a number of senior scholars will be invited to discuss new research and provide expert feedback. Although proposals for single-country projects are welcome, we are especially eager to receive proposals that involve comparison, whose scope transcends national borders, and papers that situate Eastern Europe into a larger European or global context. Those interested in participating should send a short CV and a brief summary (250-500 words) of their papers to event organizer Michael Dean (PhD in History, UC Berkeley) at michaelwdean@gmail.com by October 31, 2014. Invitations will be issued in mid November. While lodging and a portion of travel will be covered by the event’s organizers, participants should try, wherever possible, to obtain funding from their home university.

We thank the following institutions for their support: The Institute of Slavic, East European and Eurasian Studies at UC Berkeley; the UC Berkeley History Department; the Center for Interdisciplinary Polish Studies at the Viadrina University in Frankfurt (Oder); the EU Center for Excellence at UC Berkeley.

Programm

Kontakt

Michael Dean

Department of History
University of California, Berkeley 3229 Dwinelle Hall

michaelwdean@gmail.com