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Public Spheres After Socialism
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ISBN 9781841502120
Paperback 144 pages
230x174mm
Published February 2009
Imprint: Intellect
Chapter Titles     |      Comments

The concept of a public sphere has traditionally been associated with urban spaces. Public Spheres After Socialism contests this in light of shifts of perspective in the East and West after the end of the Cold War and the disintegration of the Soviet Union.

Public Spheres After Socialism draws together contemporary experiences from Armenia - an interesting site of cultural and political cross-currents - Germany, Austria, France and the United Kingdom. It reconsiders the concept of a public sphere as a figurative, or mythical, location in which the members of a society shape and determine its values and ask to what extent this public sphere exists or is viable today. Among the ideas presented in this groundbreaking volume are the cultures of public time, everyday memorials, urban reconstruction, film as a dialogic site, and the mapping of a post-socialist city in youth culture.

Esteemed academics cover a wide range of issues, including public spaces and monuments, urban reconstruction, film, new media and communication. They explore the major shifts in theory and consider how the dualism of the Cold War has been replaced by the single ideological position of globalized consumerism.

Chapter titles
Preface - Page 7
Angela Harutyunyan
Chapter 1: 'Peace in Ruins: The Value of Mementoes, Temporary Shrines and Floral Tributes as Markers of the Public Sphere' - Page 11
Paul Gough
Chapter 2: 'State Icons and Narratives in the Symbolic Cityscape of Yerevan' - Page 19
Angela Harutyunyan
Chapter 3: 'Public Sphere as a Place for Gifts: Social-symbolic Characteristics of the City-building of Post-Soviet Yerevan' - Page 29
Nazareth Karoyan (trans. A. Harutyunyan)
Chapter 4: 'Cinema as Political Movement in Democratic and Totalitarian Societies since the 1960s' - Page 39
Anna Schober
Chapter 5: 'Public Space: The City in Armenian Literature' - Page 63
Vardan Jaloyan (trans. A. Harutyunyan)
Chapter 6: 'You Tell Me: A Topography' - Page 71
Jane Rendell
Chapter 7: 'Routes through the City: Youth Identities and Spatial Practices in Leipzig' - Page 91
Kathrin Hörschelmann
Chapter 8: 'New Social Order and Change in Media Landscape' - Page 111
Hrach Bayadyan (trans. A. Harutyunyan)
Chapter 9: 'Remote Control: Dangers and Delights of Armenian TV Surfing' - Page 119
Vahram Martirosyan (trans. A. Harutyunyan)
Chapter 10: 'Time without Qualities: Cracking the Regime of Urgency ' - Page 129
Stephen Wright
Chapter 11: 'Public Spheres' - Page 133
Malcom Miles
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