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ID109169
Title ProperEveryday encounters with the global behind the iron curtain
Other Title Informationimagining freedom, desiring liberalism in socialist Romania
LanguageENG
AuthorSajed, Alina
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article challenges the liberal assumption that socialist societies were closed or isolated entities, and that it was the 1989 revolutionary moment that both freed them and integrated them into global dynamics. Everyday encounters with a particular vision of the global had already shaped the political imagination of ordinary Romanians prior to 1989. Such encounters constituted their instruction into concepts of liberalism and the liberal subject, freedom and democracy. By looking at informal (and illicit) networks of consumption of both goods and ideas (such as tuning into Radio Free Europe and Voice of America), I seek to explore the sensorial dimension of everyday politics in communist Romania and to illustrate how such a sensorial experience reinforced the imagined distance between a free and prosperous 'outside' and an impoverished and oppressive 'inside'. I use Michel de Certeau's theorizing on the everyday, and Ashis Nandy's preference for the 'non-player' as the ordinary hero of violent political projects, to go beyond the framework of power and resistance, and to explore the more nuanced practices of coping, survival and subversion.
`In' analytical NoteCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol. 24, No. 4; Dec 2011: p.551-571
Journal SourceCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol. 24, No. 4; Dec 2011: p.551-571
Key WordsEveryday Encounters ;  Imagining Freedom ;  Liberalism ;  Socialist Romania ;  Romania ;  Political Imagination ;  Politics


 
 
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