ABSTRACT

Gendering Postsocialism explores changes in gendered norms and expectations in Eastern Europe and Eurasia after the fall of the Berlin Wall. The dismantlement of state socialism in these regions triggered monumental shifts in their economic landscape, the involvement of their welfare states in social citizenship and, crucially, their established gender norms and relations, all contributing to the formation of the postsocialist citizen.

Case studies examine a wide range of issues across 15 countries of the post-Soviet era. These include gender aspects of the developments in education in Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Hungary, controversies around abortion legislation in Poland, migrant women and housing as a gendered problem in Russia, challenges facing women’s NGOs in Bosnia, and identity formation of unemployed men in Lithuania. This close analysis reveals how different variations of neoliberal ideology, centred around the notion of the self-reliant and self-determining individual, have strongly influenced postsocialist gender identities, whilst simultaneously showing significant trends for a “retraditionalising” of gender norms and expectations.

This volume suggests that despite integration with global political and free market systems, the postsocialist gendered subject combines strategies from the past with those from contemporary ideologies to navigate new multifaceted injustices around gender in Eastern Europe and Eurasia.

chapter 1|17 pages

The gendered subject of postsocialism

State-socialist legacies, global challenges and (re)building of tradition

part 1|53 pages

New gendered geographies

chapter 2|18 pages

“They are hardly feminists and could learn a lot”

Swedish-Bosnian encounters for gender equality and peace, 1993–2013

chapter 4|17 pages

Around the corner?

Female empowerment, security, and elite mind-sets in Georgia

part 2|67 pages

Neoliberal governance and the gendered enterprising self

chapter 5|16 pages

Russian hostesses in Japan

A way towards self-fulfilment?

chapter 6|17 pages

Postsocialist gender failures

Men in the economies of recognition

chapter 7|16 pages

“A mom who has time for everything”

Mothers between work and family in contemporary Ukraine

part 3|55 pages

Resilient legacies of state socialism

chapter 9|18 pages

“Women have always had harder lives”

Gender roles and representations of the self in the oral recollections of older Czech women 1

chapter 10|15 pages

Home is the “place of women’s strength”

Gendering housing in Soviet and post-Soviet Russia

part 4|52 pages

The postsocialist societies between marketisation, democratisation and retraditionalisation