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The Future of Nostalgia
 
 
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The Future of Nostalgia [Paperback]

Svetlana Boym
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 442 pages
  • Publisher: Basic Books (7 Mar 2002)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0465007082
  • ISBN-13: 978-0465007080
  • Product Dimensions: 23.2 x 15.3 x 2.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 138,981 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Svetlana Boym
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Product Description

Product Description

What happens to Old World memories in a New World order? Svetlana Boym opens up a new avenue of inquiry: the study of nostalgia.. Combining personal memoir, philosophical essay, and historical analysis, Svetlana Boym explores the spaces of collective nostalgia that connect national biography and personal self-fashioning in the twenty-first century. She guides us through the ruins and construction sites of post-communist cities-St. Petersburg, Moscow, Berlin, and Prague-and the imagined homelands of exiles-Benjamin, Nabokov, Mandelstahm, and Brodsky. From Jurassic Park to the Totalitarian Sculpture Garden, Boym unravels the threads of this global epidemic of longing and its antidotes.

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The word nostalgia comes from two Greek roots. Read the first page
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
30 of 30 people found the following review helpful
Exile's Disease 23 Jun 2001
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
This book is ingenious, absorbing, and by turns difficult and thrilling. Do not be misled by the kitschy or simplistic associations you might have to the term "nostalgia." Exile is its precondition.

Most of the examples and references are Russian and Eastern European. Each of the seventeen chapters is an essay of depth and precision. They are greatly satisfying: rich and dense with associations and references from art and literature, and the entire span of recorded human history.

Boym names Part One "Hypochondria of the Heart," and variously introduces her kaleidoscopic interests in nostalgia - as an "epidemic." Nostalgia, she asserts (and proves convincingly) is "the disease of an afflicted imagination." It afflicts those who would become assimilated to their new worlds - as well as those who (variously and often highly individualistically) resist. The second section, "Cities and Re-invented Traditions" contains five chapters that focus on Russian and European conceptions and realities. The final part, "Exiles and Imagined Homelands" is my favorite. Its chapters cover among other things the excess of souvenirs to be found in immigrants' apartments (knickknacks of identity and remembrance that would not ever be displayed back home); cyberspace, which "makes the bric-a-brac of nostalgia available in digital form"; the persistence of immigrant eccentricity; the preservation (and transformation) of attitudes, and various phenomena of adjustment. Some of the personages discussed (for there is never mere name-dropping in this book) are Adam and Eve ("the first exiles") Ovid, Telemachus, Oedipus, Odysseus, Walter Benjamin, Freud, Hanna Arendt, painter Ilya Kabakov Joseph Brodsky and Vladimir Nabokov - to name a few.

I loved this book. There isn't a slow page in it. Boym is passionately interested in art, history, psychology, signs and symbols, literature, urbanism, politics, and people. She's a deep thinker who is guided by her considerable ability to keep several balls in the air at once, to teach with clarity, and to really understand what makes people tick. There's a good index and over thirty pages of notes that enable a lot of further reading in this big and interesting subject.

A great book that deserves a wide readership.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
This is a truly remarkable book, which should be read by anybody who would understand the consciousness of the 20th and 21st centuries. I generally eschew hyperbole, but to find a book of critical theory which is not obscurantist, but attempts to elucidate really complex ideas as simply as they permit is a real treat.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Excellent book 25 Nov 2010
Format:Paperback
The book would appeal to those with interest in the history and culture of socialism. However it touches upon other fields as well, psychology for example, in explaining the roots of nostalgia as an illness in the past to the contemporary experiences of it as a cultural phenomenon.
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