1st Edition

Neoliberalism, Personhood, and Postsocialism Enterprising Selves in Changing Economies

By Nicolette Makovicky Copyright 2014
224 Pages
by Routledge

224 Pages
by Routledge

224 Pages
by Routledge

Despite a growing literature debating the consequences of neo-liberal political and economic policy in the former Eastern bloc, the idea of neo-liberal personhood has so far received limited attention from scholars of the region. Presenting a range of ethnographic studies, this book lays the groundwork for a new disciplinary agenda by critically examining novel technologies of self-government... Read more
Chapter 1 Introduction Me, Inc.? Untangling Neoliberalism, Personhood, and Postsocialism, Nicolette Makovicky; Chapter 1a Selling, Yet Still Social: Consociational Personhood Among the Self-Employed in Eastern Germany, Gareth E. Hamilton; Chapter 2 Work-Discipline and Temporal Structures in a Multinational Bank in Romania, Liviu Chelcea; Chapter 3 Using Gender in Neoliberal Business: Reinterpretations of Female Utility in a Romanian Company, Alina Petrovici; Chapter 4 The Authorial Self and Acquiring the Language of Neoliberalism in Slovakia, Jonathan L. Larson; Chapter 5 Losing the Enterprising Self in Post-Soviet Estonian Villages, Aet Annist; Chapter 6 Good Work: State Employees and the Informal Economy in Cuba, Maria Padrón Hernández; Chapter 7 Building on Trust: Open-Ended Contracts and the Duality of Self-interest in Romanian House Construction, Radu Gabriel Umbres; Chapter 8 Earning Money, Learning the Language: Slovak Au Pairs and their Passage to Adulthood, Zuzana Sekeráková Búriková; Chapter 9 Old Minorities in a New Europe: Enterprising Citizenship at the Polish-Czech Border, Nicolette Makovicky; Chapter 11 Afterword Elias talks to Hayek (and learns from Marx and Foucault): Reflections on Neoliberalism, Postsocialism and Personhood, Don Kalb;

Biography

Nicolette Makovicky is Lecturer in Russian and East European Studies at the University of Oxford, UK.

’This timely volume builds on current debates regarding post-socialism and neoliberalism and, offering detailed ethnographic observation, makes a convincing case for the value of nuanced, empirically grounded approaches to neoliberalism and some of its key concepts. Eschewing the simplistic and the abstract, it shows what neoliberalism means for particular people, in particular places and times.’ Victoria Goddard, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK