Taking Stock of Shock: Social Consequences of the 1989 Revolutions
Autor Kristen Ghodsee, Mitchell Orensteinen Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 sep 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197549230
ISBN-10: 0197549233
Pagini: 300
Dimensiuni: 240 x 162 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197549233
Pagini: 300
Dimensiuni: 240 x 162 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Laudable
Ghodsee has teamed up with political scientist Mitchell Orenstein to present a comprehensive survey of all the evidence that things have gotten worse for Eastern Europe since 1989
Taking Stock of Shock results from a massive interdisciplinary endeavor, and it is a timely and crucial contribution to the debate on postsocialism. Knocking down disciplinary walls, Ghodsee and Orenstein provide a uniquely broad insight into the post-socialist landscape. This is more than merely a scholarly achievement. Building a compelling new narrative is crucial to help break down the walls of inequality and precarity that limit the actual exercise of the freedoms post-socialist citizens nominally gained when the Berlin Wall fell.
Ghodsee and Orenstein have written a provocative book. Drawing on an impressive array of economic, demographic, public opinion, and ethnographic data, they critically analyze the emergence of stark inequalities that have generated tremendous hardships for many and enormous benefits for some.
From a starting point of cacophony, where different disciplines and data seem to depict the post-Soviet transition as either a grand success or an absolute failure, Ghodsee and Orenstein seam together a convincing narrative where both achievements and disappointments can coexist. The book's focus on widening inequality allows reconciling these opposing views and providing crucial insights not only for scholars of transition countries but also for observers and policymakers in other regions
The book presents many important pieces of evidence which, taken together, document the developments and the images of transformation that have led to the disillusionment of the majority of the population in the region today. It is therefore not only a valuable contribution to the transformation discussion across different academic fields but also has an appeal for general audiences.
This book is highly recommendable not only for the richness of data presented but also the provocative analysis, which helps to unsettle self congratulatory accounts of the "triumph of the West." East Europeans do not like inequality and unfairness, and their voices need to be heard.
This extraordinary book is a thorough assessment of the post-communist transitions in twenty-nine nations of the region, written by two scholars, Kristen Ghodsee and Mitchell A. Orenstein, representing the antipodes of the methodological spectrum. Ghodsee is a cultural anthropologist whose qualitative ethnographic approach highlights the idiosyncratic nuances of the communities under investigation. Orenstein is a political scientist specializing in quantitative research in political economy on a societal and cross-national level. Each became a renowned authority in their respective fields long before they coupled their scholarly efforts at the University of Pennsylvania. Congratulations to Penn for poaching them from other fine institutions!
Ghodsee has teamed up with political scientist Mitchell Orenstein to present a comprehensive survey of all the evidence that things have gotten worse for Eastern Europe since 1989
Taking Stock of Shock results from a massive interdisciplinary endeavor, and it is a timely and crucial contribution to the debate on postsocialism. Knocking down disciplinary walls, Ghodsee and Orenstein provide a uniquely broad insight into the post-socialist landscape. This is more than merely a scholarly achievement. Building a compelling new narrative is crucial to help break down the walls of inequality and precarity that limit the actual exercise of the freedoms post-socialist citizens nominally gained when the Berlin Wall fell.
Ghodsee and Orenstein have written a provocative book. Drawing on an impressive array of economic, demographic, public opinion, and ethnographic data, they critically analyze the emergence of stark inequalities that have generated tremendous hardships for many and enormous benefits for some.
From a starting point of cacophony, where different disciplines and data seem to depict the post-Soviet transition as either a grand success or an absolute failure, Ghodsee and Orenstein seam together a convincing narrative where both achievements and disappointments can coexist. The book's focus on widening inequality allows reconciling these opposing views and providing crucial insights not only for scholars of transition countries but also for observers and policymakers in other regions
The book presents many important pieces of evidence which, taken together, document the developments and the images of transformation that have led to the disillusionment of the majority of the population in the region today. It is therefore not only a valuable contribution to the transformation discussion across different academic fields but also has an appeal for general audiences.
This book is highly recommendable not only for the richness of data presented but also the provocative analysis, which helps to unsettle self congratulatory accounts of the "triumph of the West." East Europeans do not like inequality and unfairness, and their voices need to be heard.
This extraordinary book is a thorough assessment of the post-communist transitions in twenty-nine nations of the region, written by two scholars, Kristen Ghodsee and Mitchell A. Orenstein, representing the antipodes of the methodological spectrum. Ghodsee is a cultural anthropologist whose qualitative ethnographic approach highlights the idiosyncratic nuances of the communities under investigation. Orenstein is a political scientist specializing in quantitative research in political economy on a societal and cross-national level. Each became a renowned authority in their respective fields long before they coupled their scholarly efforts at the University of Pennsylvania. Congratulations to Penn for poaching them from other fine institutions!
Notă biografică
Kristen R. Ghodsee is Professor of Russian and East European Studies and a Member of the Graduate Group in Anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania. Her articles and essays have been translated into over twenty languages and have appeared in publications such as The New Republic, The Lancet, Ms. Magazine, The Washington Post, and The New York Times. She is also the author of nine books, most recently: Second World, Second Sex and Why Women Have Better Sex Under Socialism, which has already had thirteen foreign editions.Mitchell A. Orenstein is Professor and Chair of Russian and East European Studies and a Senior Fellow of the Foreign Policy Research Institute. He is the prize-winning author, editor, and co-author of eight books on the social policy and political economy of postcommunist states, including From Triumph to Crisis, Privatizing Pensions, and Roma in an Expanding Europe. He has consulted for the World Bank, USAID, and thegovernment of Slovakia.