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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Robert ArgenbrightPublisher: Lexington Books Imprint: Lexington Books Dimensions: Width: 16.10cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 23.30cm Weight: 0.494kg ISBN: 9781498522021ISBN 10: 1498522025 Pages: 218 Publication Date: 26 July 2016 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsThere are some books that one knows, almost from the very first page, one will enjoy. For the present writer this is such a book. Its value is in the refreshing light it throws on the Russia that has emerged since 1991. In contrast to the picture which is painted by so many journalists, politicians, and Cold War publicists of Russia as a dreary, monolithic and authoritarian land verging on totalitarianism, a perspective based essentially on Kremlinology, this book looks at Russia from below, from the perspective of ordinary people (or at least ordinary Muscovites). What emerges is a picture which is much more interesting, colorful and, in a way, more optimistic than the mass media and its informants will commonly allow.... There is much to ponder in this excellent book. * Slavic Review * By integrating battles over home, neighborhood, and monuments in Moscow into the broader theoretical literature on place, Argenbright redefines how we need to think about Russian politics. Despite Russia's indisputable authoritarian turn under Putin, urbanites continue to struggle with authorities and developers over their immediate environment-often winning a battle here and there and, as this book brilliantly reveals, forcing officials to behave differently. The result, he concludes, is that post-Soviet Moscow `has been a big mess in transition toward an unknown future.' By looking at what was happening on city streets, Argenbright provides a lively and important look at how Russia has been transformed beneath the cover of its own national politics. -- Blair Ruble, Woodrow Wilson Center The great merit of Robert Argenbright's book is its willingness to challenge prevailing opinions about the strongly autocratic governance regime in Moscow and its impotent civil society in order to better understand the complexities of city life. Moscow under Construction is an excellent book which provides detailed, pragmatic, well-balanced, and unprejudiced analysis that enables the reader (even Russian ones) to attain a deeper understanding of social transformations in Moscow. -- Olga Vendina, Institute of Geography, Russian Academy of Sciences The book carefully scrutinizes the recent and deep transformation of Moscow into a `new world city.' Argenbright analyzes how widespread redevelopment practices in the interests of political and business elites has resulted in cardinal changes in the city's urban landscape, particularly in its historic center. He describes the actions of `city-defenders' to protect their homes, neighborhoods, heritage buildings, and historic districts, and emphasizes the role of such protests in the productive growth and development of civil society, resulting in both conflict and cooperation between grassroots social movements and local authorities. The book is based on the Argenbright's more than twenty years of annual field research and numerous interviews and sociological and statistical data, and is a valuable resource for both researchers and students of social and urban geography. -- Vladimir Kolosov, Moscow State University, and president of the International Geographical Union This engaging book investigates the largest post-socialist metropolis as a stage for the emergence of civil society. Dr. Argenbright examines two decades of struggles by urban residents to protect their neighborhoods from aggressive infill development and the `creative destruction' of historic downtown areas by the city administration, well-connected private real estate developers, new transportation infrastructure projects, and even the Russian Orthodox Church. In the process, Muscovites formed place-based coalitions that included people of all ages, classes, and occupations-from grandmothers to young activists and celebrities. Urban residents fought-often successfully-for their `right to the city' in the face of the authoritarian post-Soviet regimes. Dr. Argenbright convincingly shows that Russian civil society has grown from, among other things, activism around place-making. -- Marianna Pavlovskaya, City University of New York By integrating battles over home, neighborhood, and monuments in Moscow into the broader theoretical literature on place, Argenbright redefines how we need to think about Russian politics. Despite Russia's indisputable authoritarian turn under Putin, urbanites continue to struggle with authorities and developers over their immediate environment-often winning a battle here and there and, as this book brilliantly reveals, forcing officials to behave differently. The result, he concludes, is that post-Soviet Moscow 'has been a big mess in transition toward an unknown future.' By looking at what was happening on city streets, Argenbright provides a lively and important look at how Russia has been transformed beneath the cover of its own national politics. -- Blair Ruble, Woodrow Wilson Center Author InformationRobert Argenbright is associate professor (lecturer) of geography at the University of Utah. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |