Everything Was Forever, Until It Was No More [图书] 豆瓣
作者: Alexei Yurchak publishing house: Princeton University Press 2026 - 3
Soviet socialism was based on paradoxes that were revealed by the peculiar experience of its collapse. To the people who lived in that system the collapse seemed both completely unexpected and completely unsurprising. At the moment of collapse it suddenly became obvious that Soviet life had always seemed simultaneously eternal and stagnating, vigorous and ailing, bleak and full of promise. Although these characteristics may appear mutually exclusive, in fact they were mutually constitutive. This book explores the paradoxes of Soviet life during the period of “late socialism” (1960s-1980s) through the eyes of the last Soviet generation.
Focusing on the major transformation of the 1950s at the level of discourse, ideology, language, and ritual, Alexei Yurchak traces the emergence of multiple unanticipated meanings, communities, relations, ideals, and pursuits that this transformation subsequently enabled. His historical, anthropological, and linguistic analysis draws on rich ethnographic material from Late Socialism and the post-Soviet period.
The model of Soviet socialism that emerges provides an alternative to binary accounts that describe that system as a dichotomy of official culture and unofficial culture, the state and the people, public self and private self, truth and lie—and ignore the crucial fact that, for many Soviet citizens, the fundamental values, ideals, and realities of socialism were genuinely important, although they routinely transgressed and reinterpreted the norms and rules of the socialist state.

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社会主义制度的神圣性/终极合法性被消解,但神圣性的形式继续运转。意识形态核心早已偏移真实生活,人们不再真正相信它,但又不能完全停止扮演它。|晚期苏联官僚化的系统缝隙中生长出一种美学化的西方符号,苏联社会主义体制崩溃,并不意味着“西方”的实现,而是想象中的西方随着苏联一起崩塌。这些西方符号并不在纽约、伦敦、罗马,它们在列宁格勒青年们的脑海里,人们失去的是一个可以想象的elsewhere。|确是一种如此生活三十年至到大厦崩塌的忧伤感觉。