List of Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The "Radiant Future" of Spatial and Temporal Dis/Orientations
Dijana Jelaca and Danijela Lugaric
Part I. New Approaches to (Post)Socialism: The Theory in Transition
1. The Endless Innovations of the Semiperiphery and the Peculiar Power of Eastern Europe
David Ost
2. Socialist Future in Light of Socialist Past and Capitalist Present
David M. Kotz
3. "Failing the Metronome": Queer Reading of the Postsocialist Transition
Jelisaveta Blagojevicand Jovana Timotijevic
Part II. (Post)Socialist Space(s)
4. "Brand" New States: Postsocialism, the Global Economy of Symbols, and the Challenges of National Differentiation
Robert A. Saunders
5. Putting the 'Public' in Public Goods: Space Wars in a Post- Soviet Dacha Community
Olga Shevchenko
6. Baku's Soviet Vnye: The Post- Soviet Creation of a Soviet (?) Past
Heather D. DeHaan
Part III. Memories of the Future
7. Back to the Future of (Post)Socialism: The Afterlife of Socialism in Post- Yugoslav Cultural Space
MaSa Kolanovic
8. In Friction Mode: Contesting the Memory of Socialism in Zagreb's Marshal Tito Square
Sanja Potkonjak and Nevena skrbic Alempijevic
9. The Futures of Postsocialist Childhoods: (Re)Imagining the Latvian Child, Nation, and Nature in Educational Literature
Iveta Silova
Afterword
Gary Marker
Contributors
Index
John Frederick Bailyn is Professor of Linguistics at Stony Brook University, State University of New York, and the author of The Syntax of Russian. Dijana Jelaca teaches in the Film Department at Brooklyn College and is the author of Dislocated Screen Memory: Narrating Trauma in Post-Yugoslav Cinema. Danijela Lugaric is Assistant Professor of East-Slavic Languages and Literature at the University of Zagreb, Croatia. She is the coeditor (with Jelaca and MaSa Kolanovic) of The Cultural Life of Capitalism in Yugoslavia: (Post)Socialism and Its Other.