“The Soviet Union is Inside Me”: Post-Soviet Youth in Transition

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 interv...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Olga Bostan, Ilya Malafei
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dalhousie University Libraries 2019-10-01
Series:The Journal for Undergraduate Ethnography
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.library.dal.ca/JUE/article/view/9380
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spelling doaj-822782b321104231a2a7f6a37177e86f2021-08-02T13:08:50ZengDalhousie University LibrariesThe Journal for Undergraduate Ethnography2369-87212019-10-0192506410.15273/jue.v9i2.93808598“The Soviet Union is Inside Me”: Post-Soviet Youth in TransitionOlga Bostan0Ilya Malafei1University College MaastrichtUniversity College MaastrichtThe 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.https://ojs.library.dal.ca/JUE/article/view/9380Post-Sovietmobilityyoung adultstransitionMoldovaBelarus
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olga Bostan
Ilya Malafei
spellingShingle Olga Bostan
Ilya Malafei
“The Soviet Union is Inside Me”: Post-Soviet Youth in Transition
The Journal for Undergraduate Ethnography
Post-Soviet
mobility
young adults
transition
Moldova
Belarus
author_facet Olga Bostan
Ilya Malafei
author_sort Olga Bostan
title “The Soviet Union is Inside Me”: Post-Soviet Youth in Transition
title_short “The Soviet Union is Inside Me”: Post-Soviet Youth in Transition
title_full “The Soviet Union is Inside Me”: Post-Soviet Youth in Transition
title_fullStr “The Soviet Union is Inside Me”: Post-Soviet Youth in Transition
title_full_unstemmed “The Soviet Union is Inside Me”: Post-Soviet Youth in Transition
title_sort “the soviet union is inside me”: post-soviet youth in transition
publisher Dalhousie University Libraries
series The Journal for Undergraduate Ethnography
issn 2369-8721
publishDate 2019-10-01
description 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.
topic Post-Soviet
mobility
young adults
transition
Moldova
Belarus
url https://ojs.library.dal.ca/JUE/article/view/9380
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