The STUDIA UNIVERSITATIS BABEŞ-BOLYAI issue article summary

The summary of the selected article appears at the bottom of the page. In order to get back to the contents of the issue this article belongs to you have to access the link from the title. In order to see all the articles of the archive which have as author/co-author one of the authors mentioned below, you have to access the link from the author's name.

 
       
         
    STUDIA PHILOSOPHIA - Issue no. 1 / 2010  
         
  Article:   THE DYSTOPIAN CONDITION OF POST-COMMUNISM / LA CONDITION DYSTOPIQUE DU POSTCOMMUNISME.

Authors:  CIPRIAN MIHALI.
 
       
         
  Abstract:  The communist regime was totalitarian also through its so-called revolutionary project of transformation and complete ownership of space. Especially of the urban space, through a gigantic effort of urban development and ‘modernization’ of a country like Romania whose population, economy and lifestyle were to a great extent rural. This modernization that wanted to be original was as equivocal as incomplete. The metaphysical and revolutionary project of communist modernization of urban spaces failed there where the capitalist modernity scored one of its most incontestable victories: in the creation of a public space and in the setting up of a clear theoretical and practical distinction between public and private. I will argue that the communist regime’s scorn both for the public space representing the citizens’ spontaneous creation and practice and for the invention of private spaces as experimental zones of new forms of subjectivity left traces in the social tissue: if the architecture did not know, did not want, or simply could not materialize the demand for public spaces, the people, in their turn, did not know, could not and above all did not want to learn the practices of living together in a city or, in other words, those of urban civility. Among other consequences, this makes the distinction public/private a tool very little useful in helping us understand the communist space, and even less useful in noticing the essence of post-communist transformations, especially since the present dynamics of urban spaces remains less and less loyal to the conceptual tradition of modernity.

Keywords: communism, postcommunist society, public space, private space, urban space, urban practices, precariousness, modernization
 
         
     
         
         
      Back to previous page