Living with socialism: Toward an archaeology of a post-soviet industrial town
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31163Dato
2020-11-08Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Forfatter
Venovcevs, AnatolijsSammendrag
While the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, it left a heavy legacy in the form of industrial towns, residential
buildings, infrastructure networks, and ecological damage that extends the Soviet Union’s effective history into
the present day. This paper explores this legacy through the perspective of contemporary archaeology to better
understand how material culture from the Soviet period is being reused in the present concerning the resource
extractive industry. Research focuses on the nickel, copper, and cobalt-processing town of Monchegorsk, Murmansk
Oblast in northwest Russia. By employing a combination of historical sources and fieldwork, the paper
demonstrates how things from the Soviet past are being repurposed in the post-Soviet present. This in turn limits
possibilities for imagined possible futures by its residents. The paper concludes by highlighting the need to pay
attention to the material culture of the resource extraction industry itself when studying its persistent legacies.
Forlag
ElsevierSitering
Venovcevs A. Living with socialism: Toward an archaeology of a post-soviet industrial town. The Extractive Industries and Society. 2020:1-9Metadata
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