Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Check out Bald and Bankrupt youtube channel. He is into all this stuff, but not so much the museums, more the buildings and monuments.
I grew up In Soviet Union, but the most western part of it.
Every time somebody goes on and on how bad life was, I'm looking at them as if they are doing or saying it for attention. For my parents, grandparents, myself, my friends and most of my countrymen life was beautiful from 1945-1988.
There are a few museums left in the Baltics.The Baltics were also very eager to take everything down as fast as possible.
You are more of an exception in terms of your attitude. Many Soviet Jews came to the US as refugees/asylees and they have come to believe in their own stories they told to immigration authorities so they are happy to curse the old country and say how horrible it was.
Anonymous wrote:NP with a question: I really enjoy photoessays and stories about the subdivided gilded age apartments that were communal apartments during communism and still exist in some places, as well as the new, then-modern apartment blocks built at the height of communism.
Not that I am going to be able to visit anytime soon, but is there anything similar to NYC’s tenement museum but in Russia or Eastern Europe?
Anonymous wrote:For Eastern Europe, I would read Milan Kundera— really good depiction of what life was like in thr 1960s.
There was also a great article that came out about 20 years ago about how the stasi had infiltrated the East German leftist poet scene. It was amazing. Maybe someone can find it.
For a Russia, I think the book mastering the art of Soviet cooking: a memoir is maybe the best thing I’ve ever read on the good and bad of living under Soviet communism in Russia.
The movie Burnt by the Sun is an amazing movie about the Stalinist purges that I think dealt gives it the right flavor.
There is also an old memoir by a dissident about growing up in Stalinist Russia, if you can find a translation, see this article here:
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/03064229008534989
And the book about the publication of Dr zhivago has a lot of detail about the lives of the intelligentsia weunder the first half of Soviet rule.
In general,Soviet life was very different in the 70s-80s than it was in the 50’s or in the 30’s, or during the war.
Anonymous wrote:I’d suggest Orwell’s 1984 and some of the books by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, and Gulag Archipelago come to mind).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Slightly later period (1985-1999) but I highly recommend watching The Trauma Zone documentary (used to be on YouTube and hopefully still there)
Also remember that this period in history is highly politicized. Eastern Europe is trying to break free from their socialist past and their museums will certainly be politically exaggerated, just as it is now en Vogue in say Russia to romanticize the past. You need to get a balanced view by getting acquainted with both sides.
It’s sad that Russia is perceived as too dangerous/bad form to travel RN, but the Leningrad siege museum in St Pete would be totally worth visiting.
Perceived!
I'll pass on becoming another Brittney Griner, thanks.
Just don’t bring your drug paraphernalia and you’ll be ok I promise
LOL. If the Russian authorities want to, they’ll “find” all sorts of paraphernalia on you.
They don’t want you if you are a lowly tourist
Gretchen please stop trying to make "fetch" happen.
You are overestimating your importance in life
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Too funny! That's essentially what PP is telling you. They don't stream "Mean Girls" in Russia?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh and of course you should go to Berlin I think.
Germany is not engulfed in all encompassing communism hatred like the Baltics or Poland so it will give you are less biased picture
Gee... the people who lived under the system hate it, but you think people need a "less biased picture."
Anonymous wrote:I grew up In Soviet Union, but the most western part of it.
Every time somebody goes on and on how bad life was, I'm looking at them as if they are doing or saying it for attention. For my parents, grandparents, myself, my friends and most of my countrymen life was beautiful from 1945-1988.
There are a few museums left in the Baltics. The Baltics were also very eager to take everything down as fast as possible.
Anonymous wrote:Oh and of course you should go to Berlin I think.
Germany is not engulfed in all encompassing communism hatred like the Baltics or Poland so it will give you are less biased picture