Anthropology of East Europe Review
Managing Editor; Barbara A. West
Editors: Robert Rotenberg, Eva Huseby-Darvas, Nancy Ries, Matti Bunzl, and László
Kürti
SPECIAL ISSUE: NEW DIRECTIONS IN POSTSOCIALIST STUDIES
A
NOTE FROM THE EDITOR
Robert Rotenberg, DePaul University
INTRODUCTION
TO THE ISSUE
Melissa L. Caldwell, Harvard University
DISCUSSANT REMARKS: MOBILITY, LABOR, AND TIES THAT BIND
Sascha Goluboff, Washington and Lee University
BRAIN
DRAIN, BOGUS ASYLUM SEEKERS, AND BABIES: CONFLICTING DISCOURSES OF MOBILITY
AND FERTILITY IN BULGARIA AND THE EUROPEAN UNION
Kristen Ghodsee, Bowdoin College
BETWEEN TRAGEDY AND REALITY: ARMENIAN WOMEN’S LABOR MIGRATION IN THE POST-SOVIET
PERIOD
Armine Ishkanian.
CAPITALISM
AND SOCIALISM AS CONFLICTING CULTURAL MODELS IN NICARAGUAN POLITICS
Bradley Tatar, University at Albany
SELLING
ONESELF, SELLING THE NATION: TRANSLATING SLOVAKS FOR THE EYES OF EUROPE
Jonathan Larson, University of Michigan
LIVING IN TRUTH: PHYSICS AS A WAY OF LIFE
Pál Nyíri and Joana Breidenbach, University of Oxford
BODY-ALTERATIONS
AND THE CREATION OF THE OTHER: A MACEDONIAN CASE
Ilka Thiessen, St. Thomas University
"WHO
WOULD CREATE A CZECH FEMINISM?” CHALLENGING ASSUMPTIONS IN THE PROCESS
OF CREATING RELEVANT FEMINISMS IN THE CZECH REPUBLIC
Karen Kapusta-Pofahl, University of Minnesota
ENDANGERING
MASCULINITY IN KOSOVA: CAN ALBANIAN WOMEN SAY NO?
Nita Luci, University of Michigan
AFTER THE FOLKLORIC MOVEMENT: TRADITIONAL LIFE IN POST-SOCIALIST MOLDOVA
Jennifer Cash, Indiana University
ARCHITECTURE AND THE STATE: MOSCOW URBAN CONCEPTS AFTER SOCIALISM
Anna Sokolina
THE LIFE
OF BALDAN CHIMITOVICH GOMBOEV:USING PERSONAL NARRATIVES TO APPROACH BURIAT POST-SOVIET
MUSIC
Tristra Newyear, Indiana University
THE
ROLE AND DEVELOPMENT OF SHAMANISTIC DISCOURSE AMONG SOUTHERN SIBERIAN ETHNIC
GROUPS IN THE POST-SOVIET PERIOD
Andrei Vinogradov, University of Saskatchewan
(CONSUMER)
PARADISE LOST:CAPITALIST DYNAMICS AND DISENCHANTMENT IN RURAL BULGARIA
Gerald W. Creed, Hunter College and the Graduate School , City University of
New York
ON THE PREFERENTIAL TREATMENT OF HUNGARIANS LIVING IN NEIGHBOURING COUNTRIES
Petteri Laihonen and Heino Nyyssönen, University of Jyväskylä
NATIONALISM,
MARXISM, AND WESTERN POPULAR CULTURE IN YUGOSLAVIA: IDEOLOGIES, GENUINE AND
SPURIOUS
Andrei Simic, University of Southern California
© 2003 DePaul University
The copyright for individual articles in both the print and online version of
the Anthropology of East Europe Review is retained by the individual authors.
They reserve all rights other than those stated here. Please contact the managing
editor for details on contacting these authors. Permission is granted for
reproducing these articles for scholarly and classroom use as long as only the
cost of reproduction is charged to the students. Commercial reproduction of
these articles requires the permission of the authors.
ISSN: 1054-4720