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Cold War binaries and the culture of consumption in the late Soviet home

Susan E. Reid (Department of Politics, History and International Relations, Loughborough University, Loughborough, United Kingdom)

Journal of Historical Research in Marketing

ISSN: 1755-750X

Article publication date: 15 February 2016

1134

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to challenge Cold War binaries, seeking a more nuanced understanding of popular experience of change in the Soviet Union’s last decades. This was a period of intensive modernization and rapid transformation in Soviet citizens’ everyday material environment, marked by the mass move to newly constructed housing and by changing relations with goods.

Design/methodology/approach

To probe popular experience and changing meanings, the paper turns to qualitative, subjective sources, drawing on oral history interviews (Everyday Aesthetics in the Modern Soviet Flat, 2004-2007).

Findings

The paper finds that qualitative changes took place in Soviet popular consumer culture during the 1960s-1970s, as millions of people made home in new housing amid the widespread media circulation of authoritative images representing a desirable modern lifestyle and modernist aesthetic. Soviet people began to make aesthetic or semiotic distinctions between functionally identical goods and were concerned to find the right furniture to fit a desired lifestyle, aesthetic ideal and sense of self.

Research limitations/implications

The problem is how to conceptualize the trajectory of change in ways that do justice to historical subjects’ experience and narratives, while avoiding uncritically reproducing Cold War binaries or perpetuating the normative status claimed by the postwar West in defining modernity and consumer culture.

Originality/value

The paper challenges dominant Cold War narratives, according to which Soviet popular relations with goods were encompassed by shortage and necessity. It advances understanding of the specific form of modern consumer culture, which, it argues, took shape in the USSR after Stalin.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This paper draws on interviews conducted in 2004-2007 for my research project Everyday Aesthetics in the Modern Soviet Flat, funded by The Leverhulme Trust. I am also indebted to the AHRC for support in publishing the findings.

Citation

Reid, S.E. (2016), "Cold War binaries and the culture of consumption in the late Soviet home", Journal of Historical Research in Marketing, Vol. 8 No. 1, pp. 17-43. https://doi.org/10.1108/JHRM-09-2015-0038

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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