Contents
Notes on Contributors
1. Socialist Spaces: Sites of Everyday Life in the Eastern Bloc, David Crowley and Susan E.
Reid
2. Accommodation and Agitation in Sevastopol: Redefining Socialist Space in the Postwar
'City of Glory', Karl D. Qualls
3. Living in the Russian Present with a German Past: The Problems of Identity in the City of
Kaliningrad, Olga Sezneva
4. The Role of Monumental Sculpture in the Construction of Socialist Space in Stalinist
Hungary, Reuben Fowkes
5. Wandering the Streets of Socialism: A Discussion of the Street Photography of Arno
Fischer and Ursula Arnold, Astrid Ihle
6. Soviet Exurbia: Dachas in Postwar Russia, Stephen Lovell
7. Weekend Getaways: the Chata, the Tramp and the Politics of Private Life in post-1968
Czechoslovakia, Paulina Bren
8. Khrushchev's Children's Paradise: The Pioneer Palace, Moscow, 1958@62, Susan E. Reid
9. Warsaw Interiors: The Public Life of Private Spaces, 1949@65, David Crowley
10. Public Privacy in the Soviet Communal Apartment, Katerina Gerasimova
11. Curtains: D©cor for the End of Empire, Mark A. Svede
Notes on Contributors
Paulina Bren
Paulina Bren, doctoral candidate at New York University, is currently working on a
cultural history of post-Prague Spring Czechoslovakia. She has written extensively on the
politics of popular and material culture and its intersections with late communism and
ideology in East-Central Europe.
David Crowley
David Crowley teaches the history of design at the Royal College of Art, London. He is
the author of various books including National Style and Nation-state. Design in Poland
from the Vernacular Revival (MUP, 1992) and is co-editor, with Susan Reid, of Style and
Socialism: Modernity and Material Culture in Postwar Eastern Europe (Berg, 2000).
Moving Warsaw, a book on the reconstruction of the Polish capital, will be published by
Reaktion Books in 2003.
Reuben Fowkes
Reuben Fowkes is a doctoral candidate at Essex University, and currently working on art
and politics in postwar Eastern Europe. He has written widely on communist-era
monumental sculpture in relation to war memorials, the cult of Stalin and the New Man
and Woman of the socialist utopia.
Katerina Gerasimova
Katerina Gerasimova received her candidate degree in sociology from the European
University at St Petersburg and is an associated researcher at the European University
and researcher in the Centre for Independent Social Research in St Petersburg. She is the
author of 'Soviet communal apartment' in J. Smith, ed., Beyond the Limits: The Concept
of Space in Russian History and Culture (Helsinki: Studia Historica (62), 1999) and
several articles on the history and sociology of housing in St Petersburg in Russian-
language journals.
Astrid Ihle
Astrid Ihle is currently completing her Ph.D. on 'GDR Women Photographers.
1949@1961' at the Courtauld Institute of Art in London, England. She worked as
assistant to the director of the gallery EIGEN + ART in Berlin from 1995 to 1998. She
was curator of Louise Bourgeois. Drawings and Sculptures at the Paula B¶ttcher Gallery,
Berlin, 1999, and is curating an exhibition of photographs by Evelyn Richter at the
Goethe-Institut in New York (autumn 2002).
Stephen Lovell
Stephen Lovell is a lecturer in European history at King's College London. He is the
author of The Russian Reading Revolution: Print Culture in the Soviet and Post-Soviet
Eras (2000), and of Summerfolk: A History of the Dacha, 1710-2000 (Cornell University
Press, forthcoming).
Karl D. Qualls
Karl D. Qualls received his Ph.D. from Georgetown University and is assistant professor
of history at Dickinson College. He is the author of 'Local-Outsider Negotiations in
Sevastopol's Postwar Reconstruction, 1944@53', in P