Lexington Books
Pages: 184
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7391-8802-6 • Hardback • August 2014 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
978-0-7391-8803-3 • eBook • August 2014 • $114.00 • (£88.00)
Olga Baysha is assistant professor at the National Research University Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russian Federation.
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
PART I. MODERNITY AND MYTH
CHAPTER 1. Modernity and Its Projects
Modernity, Colonization, and Globalization
Multiple Modernities and Cultural Hybridization
Modernization through Internal Colonization
The Myth of Enlightenment
CHAPTER 2. Deconstructing Mythologies
Roland Barthes’s Mythologies
The Schizophrenia of the Network
The Idea of Framing
Frame Analysis of Modernization Myths
PART II. SOVIET MODERNITY
CHAPTER 3. The Rise and Fall of an Alternative Project
Great Transformation
Stagnation and Gorbachev Reforms
CHAPTER 4. The Discourses of Perestroika
Democracy
Market
The United States
PART III. THE VERNACULAR VS. THE ELITE
On Methodology
CHAPTER 5. Mythologizing Democracy
Intellectual Mythology: The Highway of Civilization
Vernacular Mythology: Power to the People!
CHAPTER 6. Mythologizing the Market
Intellectual Mythology: The invisible Hand
Vernacular Mythology: Enriching Working People
CHAPTER 7. Mythologizing the United States: The Horn of Plenty
PART IV. THE SCHIZOPHRENIA OF PERESTROIKA
CHAPTER 8. The Twilight Zone
The Spirit of Hopelessness
World Risk Society
The Logic of Both / And
CHAPTER 9. Schizophrenia as a Communicative Disorder
Double Bind
Network Schizophrenia and the Public Sphere
CHAPTER 10. Personal Reflections
CONCLUSION
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Primary Sources: Media Articles
Secondary Sources
APPENDIX A. Research Design
Data Collecting
Coding
APPENDIX B. Statistical Results
Baysha's point is not simply that 'the intellectuals' were deluded or cynical tools and that Soviet citizens were misled and taken advantage of. . . .more important is her argument that what took place here was a form of collective communicative disorientation.
— The Russian Review