Preview

Outlines of global transformations: politics, economics, law

Advanced search

“Nostalgia Not for the Past but Nostalgia for the Present”: Post-Soviet Youth on USSR’s Collapse

https://doi.org/10.23932/2542-0240-2021-14-5-12

Abstract

. The article focuses on the perceptions of the generation of post-Soviet youth about the collapse of the USSR. An attempt to analyse the reasons for the favourable and “nostalgic” attitude to the USSR on the part of those who, due to their age, have no experience of Soviet life is made. It is shown that, according to mass surveys, attitudes towards the collapse of the USSR depend on the age of respondents: older generations predominantly perceive the collapse of the Soviet Union negatively, while among young people (especially in the youngest cohort of 18-24-year olds) the number of those who are not upset about the collapse of the USSR exceeds the number who regret it. The dynamics of public opinion on this event have been erratic in recent years, strongly influenced by the “Crimean effect”: during the Crimean crisis 2014, the number of those regretting the collapse of the USSR rose sharply, but, years later, it has returned to its previous level. The data of the author’s study devoted to the problem of perception of post-Soviet transformations and the 90s in general by young Russians are given. The study conducted has shown that young people’s attitudes towards the post-Soviet period in Russian society are mainly based on clichés about the “wild” nineties that have been replicated in the Russian media. In their assessments, young people often rely on the views of parents (or other older relatives) and teachers. The mythology of young people’s perception of the events of December 1991 and their internal distance from the last decade of the XX century, as well as their poor knowledge of Soviet and post-Soviet realities of life are noted. The conclusion is drawn that some young people’s interest in the Soviet past stems from dreams of a prosperous and just society of equal opportunities, from which today’s Russia is so far removed.

About the Author

M. A. Yadova
Institute of Scientific Information for Social Sciences of the Russian Academy of Sciences (INION RAN)
Russian Federation

Maiya A. Yadova - PhD in Sociology, Head of the Department of Sociology and Social Psychology

117418, Nakhimovsky Av., 51/21, Moscow



References

1. Bartmanski D. (2011). Successful Icons of Failed Time: Rethinking Post-Communist Nostalgia. Acta Sociologica, vol. 54, no 3, pp. 213–231. DOI: 10.1177/0001699311412625

2. Bauman Z. (2017). Retrotopia, Cambridge: Polity Press.

3. Berdahl D. (1999). “(N)Ostalgia” for the Present: Memory, Longing, and East German Things. Ethno, vol. 64, no 2, pp. 192– 211. DOI: 10.1080/00141844.1999.9981598

4. Boyer D. (2006). Ostalgie and the Politics of the Future in Eastern Germany. Public Culture, vol. 18, no 2, pp. 361– 381. Available at: https://profiles.rice.edu/sites/g/files/bxs3341/files/inline-files/Ostalgie.pdf, accessed 20.05.2021.

5. Boym S. (2001). The Future of Nostalgia, New York: Basic Books.

6. Durkheim E. (1995). The Elementary Forms of Religious Life, New York: Free Press.

7. Glukhova A.V., Sidenko O.A., Sosunov D.V., Shcheglova D.V. (2020). Searching for the Desirable Future: Internal Political Agenda for Russia. Sotsiologicheskie issledovaniya, no 2, pp. 43–52 (in Russian). DOI: 10.31857/S013216250008493-5

8. Gorshkov M.K., Sheregi F.E. (2020). The Youth of Russia in the Mirror of Sociology: On the Results of Years of Research, Moscow: Federal center of theoretical and applied sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences (in Russian).

9. Grusheckij A., Paniotto V. (2020). The Assessment of the Soviet Past: May 2020. KIIS, June 26, 2020. Available at: https://www.kiis.com.ua/?lang=rus&cat=reports&id=950&page=1, accessed 20.05.2021 (in Russian).

10. Hirsch M. (2012). The Generation of Postmemory: Writing and Visual Culture after the Holocaust, New York: Columbia University Press.

11. Inglehart R. (1990). Culture Shift in Advanced Industrial Society, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.

12. Inkeles A., Smith D.H. (1974). Becoming Modern, Cambridge, МА: Harvard University Press.

13. Kasamara V.A., Sorokina A.A. (2014). The Image of the USSR and Modern Russia in the Representations of Students. Social Sciences and Contemporary World, no 1, pp. 107–118. Available at: https://ecsocman.hse.ru/data/2015/11/28/1250991359/107-118(Kasamara).pdf, accessed 20.05.2021 (in Russian).

14. Korocharov A.V. (2021). Disintegration of the USSR in Modern School Textbooks. Free Thought, no 1, pp. 25–42. Available at: https://elibrary.ru/download/elibrary_45590693_33436257.pdf, accessed 20.05.2021 (in Russian).

15. Kovadin M.A., Fofanova K.V. (2003). The Soviet Union as Part of the Collective Memory of Youth: A Sociological Analysis. Russian Good Magazine, no 1, pp. 63–73. Available at: https://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/sovetskiy-soyuz-kak-chast-kollektivnoy-pamyati-molodezhi-sotsiologicheskiy-analiz/viewer, accessed 20.05.2021 (in Russian).

16. Levada Yu.A. (2010). Interview by Sasha Kannone. Memoirs and Discussions of Yu.A. Levada, Мoscow: Karpov E.V., pp. 13– 21 (in Russian).

17. Pipiya K. (2020). Memory Structure and Reconstruction of the Soviet Union in Russian Public Opinion, Мoscow: Levadacenter (in Russian).

18. Popov N.P. (2007). Nostalgia for the Greatness. Russia in the Post-Soviet Space. Monitoring of Public Opinion: Economic and Social Changes, no 1, pp. 44–53. Available at: https://elibrary.ru/download/elibrary_16224847_17227303.pdf, accessed 20.05.2021 (in Russian).

19. Popov N.P. (2019). Comparative Analysis of Social and Political Views of Russian and American Youth. Monitoring of Public Opinion: Economic and Social Changes, no 1, pp. 126–152 (in Russian). DOI: 10.14515/monitoring.2019.1.06

20. Radaev V.V. (2019). Millennials: How the Russian Society Changes, Moscow: HSE (in Russian).

21. Shestopal E.B. (2016). Elites and Society as Political Actors in Post-Soviet Russia. Sotsiologicheskie issledovaniya, no 5, pp. 35–43. Available at: https://elibrary.ru/download/elibrary_26125601_82105691. pdf, accessed 20.05.2021 (in Russian).

22. Shilov V.V. (2020). Historical and Sociological Aspect of the Concept of Great Power. Vlast’, no 3, pp. 181–189. Available at: https://elibrary.ru/download/elibrary_43117430_93634469.pdf, accessed 20.05.2021 (in Russian).

23. Stepanova M.M. (2017). In Memory of Memory: Romance, Мoscow: Novoe izdatel’stvo (in Russian).

24. Yadova M.A. (2012). Perception of 1990-s and 2000-s years by the “Modernists” and “Traditionalists” of Post-Soviet Generation. Political Science, no 2, pp. 177–195. Available at: https://elibrary.ru/download/elibrary_17787605_78182198.pdf, accessed 20.05.2021 (in Russian).

25. Yadova M.A. (2016). Crimean Crisis – 2014 as Seen by the Post-Soviet Youth Generation. Sotsiologicheskie issledovaniya, no 9, pp. 50–58. Available at: https://elibrary.ru/download/elibrary_26687692_26064431.pdf, accessed 20.05.2021 (in Russian).

26. Zborovskij G.E., Shirokova E.A. (2001). Social Nostalgia: To Study the Phenomenon. Sotsiologicheskie issledovaniya, no 8, pp. 31–34. Available at: https://ecsocman.hse.ru/data/734/894/1217/005Zborovskij.pdf, accessed 20.05.2021 (in Russian).

27. Zorkaya N. (2007). “Nostalgia for the Past” or What Lessons Could Learn and Have Learnt the Young? Vestnik obshhestvennogo mneniya, no 3, pp. 35–46. Available at: https://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/nostalgiya-po-proshlomu-ili-kakie-uroki-mogla-usvoit-i-usvoila-molodezh/viewer, accessed 20.05.2021 (in Russian).


Review

For citations:


Yadova M.A. “Nostalgia Not for the Past but Nostalgia for the Present”: Post-Soviet Youth on USSR’s Collapse. Outlines of global transformations: politics, economics, law. 2021;14(5):231-246. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.23932/2542-0240-2021-14-5-12

Views: 1263


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2542-0240 (Print)
ISSN 2587-9324 (Online)