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Summerfolk - A History of the Dacha, 1710-2000 (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,775
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Summerfolk - A History of the Dacha, 1710-2000 (Hardcover)
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The dacha is a sometimes beloved, sometimes scorned Russian
dwelling. Alexander Pushkin summered in one; Joseph Stalin lived in
one for the last twenty years of his life; and contemporary Russian
families still escape the city to spend time in them. Stephen
Lovell's generously illustrated book is the first social and
cultural history of the dacha. Lovell traces the dwelling's origins
as a villa for the court elite in the early eighteenth century
through its nineteenth-century role as the emblem of a middle-class
lifestyle, its place under communist rule, and its post-Soviet
incarnation. A fascinating work rich in detail, Summerfolk explores
the ways in which Russia's turbulent past has shaped the function
of the dacha and attitudes toward it. The book also demonstrates
the crucial role that the dacha has played in the development of
Russia's two most important cities, Moscow and St. Petersburg, by
providing residents with a refuge from the squalid and crowded
metropolis. Like the suburbs in other nations, the dacha form of
settlement served to alleviate social anxieties about urban growth.
Lovell shows that the dacha is defined less by its physical
location"usually one or two hours" distance from a large city yet
apart from the rural hinterland than by the routines, values, and
ideologies of its inhabitants. Drawing on sources as diverse as
architectural pattern books, memoirs, paintings, fiction, and
newspapers, he examines how dachniki ("summerfolk") have freed
themselves from the workplace, cultivated domestic space, and
created informal yet intense intellectual communities. He also
reflects on the disdain that many Russians have felt toward the
dacha, and their association of its lifestyle with physical
idleness, private property, and unproductive use of the land.
Russian attitudes toward the dacha are, Lovell asserts, constantly
evolving. The word "dacha" has evoked both delight in and hostility
to leisure. It has implied both the rejection of agricultural labor
and, more recently, a return to the soil. In Summerfolk, the dacha
is a unique vantage point from which to observe the Russian social
landscape and Russian life in the private sphere."
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