Izvorni znanstveni članak
Transition, Tradition, and Nostalgia; Postsocialist Transformations in a Comparative Framework
Chris Hann
; Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Halle, Germany
Sažetak
The concepts of transition and tradition have not been the object of much original theoretical work in recent Anglophone socio-cultural anthropology. The term transition has been applied loosely to the demise of socialist regimes in Eastern Europe and their replacement by market economies and more pluralist forms of government. However, these objectives have proved elusive and most anthropologists therefore speak of open-ended »transformation processes« rather than a linear shift to capitalist democracy. Use of the concept of tradition has been much influenced by the work of historians on the »invention of tradition«. This paper explores how societies, in particular elite groups, construct different types of tradition in the wake of historical caesurae. Paying particular attention to the concept of nostalgia, it compares perceptions of the past in Britain, where social change has been largely gradual, with those in empires and states which experienced sharp political discontinuities in the twentieth century. To explain and understand nostalgia for socialism in large sections of the population in many postsocialist states, it is necessary to investigate not only economic and social mobility and related material factors but also factors pertaining to identity, especially collective identities.
Ključne riječi
Britain; East Germany; heritage; identity; modernism; nostalgia; post-socialism; revolution; socialism; tradition
Hrčak ID:
94850
URI
Datum izdavanja:
27.12.2012.
Posjeta: 1.900 *