Katherine Verdery analyzes the 2,781 page surveillance file the Romanian secret police compiled on her during her research trips to Transylvania in the 1970s and 1980s. Reading it led her to question her identity and also revealed how deeply the secret police was embedded in everyday life.
Katherine Verdery Poradie kníh (chronologicky)
Katherine Verdery je popredná antropologička, ktorej práca sa hlboko ponára do politickej ekonómie, etnických vzťahov a nacionalizmu, s dôrazom na rumunský kontext. Jej výskum sa vyvinul od štúdia sociálnej nerovnosti k analýze transformačných procesov po páde socializmu, najmä so zameraním na zmeny vlastníckych vzťahov v poľnohospodárstve. Verdery skúma, ako sa tieto zmeny prejavujú v komunitách, a analyzuje zložité otázky vlastníctva a hodnôt v postsocialistickom prostredí. Jej rozsiahle projekty odhaľujú dynamiku formovania kolektívnych a štátnych fariem a vplyvy týchto procesov na vidiecke obyvateľstvo.



What Was Socialism, and What Comes Next?
- 316 stránok
- 12 hodin čítania
Katherine Verdery offers a unique anthropological perspective on the aftermath of Soviet-style socialism in Eastern Europe through a collection of essays. Drawing from her extensive ethnographic research in Romania and Transylvania, she examines the implications of political transformations, focusing on themes like civil society, market economy creation, privatization, national and ethnic conflicts, and evolving gender relations. Her work synthesizes primary data and broader sources to deepen the understanding of socialism's legacy and its potential replacements.
The current transformation of many Eastern European societies is impossible to understand without comprehending the intellectual struggles surrounding nationalism in the region. Anthropologist Katherine Verdery shows how the example of Romania suggests that current ethnic tensions come not from a resurrection of pre-Communist Nationalism but from the strengthening of national ideologies under Communist Party rule.