Post-communist city text in Košice, Slovakia as a liminal landscape

During the communist period in Slovakia (1948-1989), street toponyms and monuments were a few of the many realms of ideological infusion by the communist government. Renaming streets and establishing monuments in honor of local and international socialist figures was intended to have an aggregate ef...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chloupek Brett R.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2019-04-01
Series:Miscellanea Geographica: Regional Studies on Development
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/mgrsd-2019-0009
id doaj-136bce9dc2244127ae1fcab7ab7fb6c6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-136bce9dc2244127ae1fcab7ab7fb6c62021-09-06T19:22:32ZengSciendoMiscellanea Geographica: Regional Studies on Development2084-61182019-04-01232717510.2478/mgrsd-2019-0009mgrsd-2019-0009Post-communist city text in Košice, Slovakia as a liminal landscapeChloupek Brett R.0Department of Humanities and Social Sciences,Northwest Missouri State University in Maryville,MOUSADuring the communist period in Slovakia (1948-1989), street toponyms and monuments were a few of the many realms of ideological infusion by the communist government. Renaming streets and establishing monuments in honor of local and international socialist figures was intended to have an aggregate effect on public consciousness in a way that helped legitimize the political rule of the communist regime. However, because the nature of socialist commemorations is fundamentally more complex that those of other competing ideologies like nationalist movements, these commemorations took on complex and sometimes contradictory meanings in the public memory that, in some cases, cause them to persist to this day. This paper utilizes Turner’s (1975) concept of ‘liminality’ to examine elements of city text like toponyms and statues in the eastern Slovak city of Košice to demonstrate why many of these communist-era elements of city text remain as leftover landscapes of the communist period.https://doi.org/10.2478/mgrsd-2019-0009toponymsliminalityslovakiakošicecity textcommunism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chloupek Brett R.
spellingShingle Chloupek Brett R.
Post-communist city text in Košice, Slovakia as a liminal landscape
Miscellanea Geographica: Regional Studies on Development
toponyms
liminality
slovakia
košice
city text
communism
author_facet Chloupek Brett R.
author_sort Chloupek Brett R.
title Post-communist city text in Košice, Slovakia as a liminal landscape
title_short Post-communist city text in Košice, Slovakia as a liminal landscape
title_full Post-communist city text in Košice, Slovakia as a liminal landscape
title_fullStr Post-communist city text in Košice, Slovakia as a liminal landscape
title_full_unstemmed Post-communist city text in Košice, Slovakia as a liminal landscape
title_sort post-communist city text in košice, slovakia as a liminal landscape
publisher Sciendo
series Miscellanea Geographica: Regional Studies on Development
issn 2084-6118
publishDate 2019-04-01
description During the communist period in Slovakia (1948-1989), street toponyms and monuments were a few of the many realms of ideological infusion by the communist government. Renaming streets and establishing monuments in honor of local and international socialist figures was intended to have an aggregate effect on public consciousness in a way that helped legitimize the political rule of the communist regime. However, because the nature of socialist commemorations is fundamentally more complex that those of other competing ideologies like nationalist movements, these commemorations took on complex and sometimes contradictory meanings in the public memory that, in some cases, cause them to persist to this day. This paper utilizes Turner’s (1975) concept of ‘liminality’ to examine elements of city text like toponyms and statues in the eastern Slovak city of Košice to demonstrate why many of these communist-era elements of city text remain as leftover landscapes of the communist period.
topic toponyms
liminality
slovakia
košice
city text
communism
url https://doi.org/10.2478/mgrsd-2019-0009
work_keys_str_mv AT chloupekbrettr postcommunistcitytextinkosiceslovakiaasaliminallandscape
_version_ 1717771773818175488