1st Edition

Post-Communist Aesthetics Revolutions, capitalism, violence

By Anca Pusca Copyright 2016
    160 Pages
    by Routledge

    160 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    In this book, Anca Pusca seeks to extend the aesthetic and cultural turn in international relations to an analysis of post-communist transitions in Central and Eastern Europe. Building on the philosophy of Walter Benjamin and Jacques Ranciere, the work investigates how post-communist film, photography, theatre, art, museumization and architecture have creatively re-engaged with ideas of revolution, communism, capitalism and ethnic violence, and how this in turn has helped people survive and reinvent themselves amongst the material and ideological ruins of communism. The work illustrates how popular culture has effectively targeted and re-interpreted the classical representations of the transition in order to question:



    • The origin – focusing on practices of re-staging, memorializing and questioning the 1989 revolutions.



    • The unfolding – focusing on the human and material consequences of significant changes in processes of production and consumption.



    • The potential end – focusing on the illusions and disillusions surrounding the 'transition' process.  



    A unique take on the influence that popular culture has had and continues to have on how we understand the post-communist transitions, this work will be of great interest to students and scholars of cultural and visual studies, eastern European politics and international relations.

    1. What/Why/How Post Communist Aesthetics?  2. Restaging the 1989 Revolution: Television, Film and Public Spaces  3. Erasing Communism: Industrial and Human Ruins of Post Communist Europe  4. Building Capitalism: Consuming Desires and the Architectures that Sustain Them  5. The ‘Aesthetics of Violence’: Roma/Gypsies Visibility and the Re-Partitioning of the Sensible  6. The end of ‘Transitology’, the end of Post Communism, the end…

    Biography

    Anca M. Pusca's current research seeks to re-conceptualize the aesthetics of change within the context of today’s EU and its candidate states, by tracing spatial, architectural and visual representations and responses to EU’s most important policies: from immigration, monetary and the common agricultural policy to constitutional reform. She lecturers at Goldsmiths, University of London.