COURSE DESCRIPTION
Remembering Socialism in Central and Southeastern Europe
Programme:
Comparative Studies of Ideas and Cultures (3rd level)
Module:Cultural History
Course code: 35
Year of study: Brez letnika
Course principal:
Prof. Tanja Petrović, Ph.D.
ECTS: 6
Workload: lectures 60 hours, seminar 30 hours
Course type: general elective
Languages: Slovene
Learning and teaching methods: lectures, discussion classes
Objectives and competences
More than a decade and a half after the end of socialism, in post-communist societies we are witnessing processes that attract the curiosity and attention of both their actors and outside observers. This course approaches remembering socialism as a cultural and discursive practice that is intrinsically connected to present-day reality and enables negotiation and justification of social positions, strategies, and moral values in the period of post-communist transformations. The emphasis is on personal experiences, interpretations and narrations of these memories, their relation to prevailing collective and “official” interpretations, and their political relevance.
Prerequisites
None required.
Content (Syllabus outline)
Remembering socialism as a cultural and discursive practice:
- Why study memory?
- Why study post- socialism?
- Terminological issues: post-socialism, post- socialism, transition, transformation
- Characteristics of approaches to post-communist societies
- Forms of remembering socialism: web pages, museums, narratives, literature, film, etc.
Nostalgia for socialism: between justification and accusation:
- History of nostalgia
- Nostalgia as socially relevant phenomenon
- Functions and actors of nostalgia for socialism
- Forms of nostalgia for socialism
- Nostalgia for socialism and consumerism
Remembering socialism in the former Yugoslavia:
- Characteristics of Yugoslav socialism and post-Yugoslav post- socialism
- Remembering socialism between the national and supra-national
- Dialogue between “official” and private memories
Yugo-nostalgia as a social and cultural phenomenon:
- Functions and forms of Yugo-nostalgia
- Characteristics of Yugo-nostalgic discourses
- Forms of Yugo-nostalgia among former Yugoslavs
- Yugo-nostalgia and diaspora
Remembering socialism in the arts and other performative forms:
- Remembering socialism and cinematography
- Remembering socialism and literature
- Remembering socialism and other artistic forms
Remembering socialism and shaping collective identities:
- Remembering socialism and the working class
- Remembering socialism and former soldiers
- Remembering socialism and partisans
- Remembering socialism and women
- Remembering socialism and members of minority communities
Readings
- Boym, Svetlana. 2001. The Future of Nostalgia, New York: Basic Books.
- Hann, Chris M. ur. 2002. Postsocialism: Ideals, Ideologies and Practices in Eurasia, Routledge.
- Forrester, Sibelan, Zaborowska, Magdalena in Gapova, Elena ur. 2004. Over the Wall/After the Fall: Post-Communist Cultures Through an East-West Gaze, Indiana University Press.
- Berdahl, Daphne. 1999, Where the World Ended: Re-Unification and Identity in the German Borderland, Berkeley – Los Angeles – London: University of California Press.
- Stewart, Kathleen. 1988. Nostalgia – A Polemic, Cultural Anthropology, 3/3.
- Nostalgia, Balcanis, 12-16, letnik 5, pomlad-zima 2004.
- Yuniverzum, Časopis za kritiko znanosti, 2006.
Assessment
- Active participation in discussion classes and an essay (5–8 pages) in which students analyse an issue and support their arguments with excerpts from relevant reading.
- An oral exam in which the student must demonstrate a sufficient understanding of the overall course content.
- Assessment:
- The written essay demonstrates students’ ability to concentrate on a particular issue, to choose relevant reading, and to engage in analytical reasoning, argumentation, and expression in writing.
- The oral exam assesses what students learned during lectures and their ability to understand, articulate, and present relevant issues.