"The Soviet Union is Inside Me": Post-Soviet Youth in Transition (original) (raw)

2019, The Journal for Undergraduate Ethnography (JUE)

The USSR ceased to exist 28 years ago, and there are generations of young people who were born after the dissolution. Mobility opportunities are now abundant and easily available to them. Yet the Soviet past still shapes the post-Soviet present for citizens of countries of the former USSR. We interviewed eight young people from Belarus and Moldova who currently reside in the Netherlands and utilised grounded theory methodology to understand how they make sense of the Soviet past of their countries and how it influences them. While the post-Soviet young adults possess an internalised experience of reminiscences of Soviet times and have inherited certain patterns of thinking, communicating, and behaving, they are detached from Sovietness and express neither love nor hatred towards it. They locate themselves in a symbolic middle position in which they are critical both towards the Soviet legacy and 'the Western' alternatives, and the very transitional character of their position becomes the essence of it. The findings contribute to the body of scholarship on young adults' experiences in post-Soviet countries, and the evaluation and understanding of the Soviet experience. Furthermore, they assist in understanding current events as well as the trends and the mobility trajectories of post-Soviet young adults.

“The Relics of 1991: Memories and Phenomenology of the Post-Soviet Generation”

Social and Cultural Change in Central Asia: The Soviet Legacy, 2013

PEER-REVIEWED: Exploring the structure of a generation -- my generation: those of us who are in their 20s and 30s today and who were school children when the communist governments collapsed in 1991, and who have been, as it were, living the ruins ever since. I employ phenomenological analysis of anecdotal data in the form of self-reporting of young, literate, and educated Central Asians derived from interviews, e-mails, and blog posts.

Eastern European youth identities in uncertain times

2018

Young people talked about several factors that were important to their sense of identity. Some key dimensions of their identities were related to being young migrants, their nationality and transnational relationships with family and friends and also, the languages they spoke and the multiple cultures they were navigating. In the context of Brexit, their feelings of being marginalised or not fully accepted also impacted on their sense of identity and who they are. There was often a disjuncture between what young people identified as their nationality, often related to their country of birth, and where the felt at home - mostly in the UK. Home was linked to a sense of identity and many young people said they felt they had multiple homes. This was generally seen as a positive thing, although some young people described the challenges of living between different cultures. Feelings of belonging often resulted from feeling connected to people and places which were familiar and welcoming....

‘We don’t have any limits’: Russian young adult life narratives through a social generations lens

Journal of Youth Studies, 2016

A social generation framework attends to how emergent historical patterns of social organization shape young adult contemporaries, noting shared strategies to constructing subjectivity within a common political, social, and economic milieu. However, the perspective has given scant attention to how young people engage in reflexive life management outside of well-documented Western contexts. Additionally, the framework needs further consideration of how youth lives are shaped by the social relations of globalization. To address these omissions, this article examines how educated, urban Russian young adults engage in reflexive life management. In drawing on a social generations rather than transitions approach, youth meaning-making is analyzed through grounded analysis rather than reliance on previously conceived categories. The study of youth reflexive life management can be reframed as a question: ‘what does making a life mean to educated urban post-adolescents in Russia?’ We explore how respondents interpret difference and inequality through transnational comparisons, center globality in the biographical project, and encounter citizenship constraints. We focus on three meaning-making projects: idealized globality, assuming nonlinear paths, and vigilant evaluative work.

Imagining young adults' citizenship in Russia: from fatalism to affective ideas of belonging

2016

This article contributes to a comparative analysis of the meaning of citizenship for youth. Young people, traditionally seen as 'incomplete' citizens in the process of transition to adulthood, possess their own everyday understanding of what it means to be a citizen in the contemporary world. Based on empirical qualitative material collected in two Russian cities, it is argued that there is a disjunction among young Russians between the ideal-typical perception of citizenship and the practical realisation of it. Particular emphasis is put on the 'emotional' understanding of citizenship by Russian youth involving the experience of particular feelings towards fellow citizens and the country.

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Macek, P., Flanagan, C. A., Gallay, L., Kostron, L., Botcheva, L. & Csapó, B. (1998). Postcommunist societies in times of transition: Perceptions of change among adolescents in Central and Eastern Europe. Journal of Social Issues, 54(3), 547-56.1.

1998