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xi | |
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xiii | |
Introduction The Silent Noise of (Everyday) Identities |
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1 | (16) |
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Doggy Bags and Post-Soviet Identities |
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1 | (3) |
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Limp Flags and Noisy Invisible Identities (Post-Socialism and the Everyday) |
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4 | (6) |
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10 | (2) |
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Structure of the Book and Main Themes |
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12 | (5) |
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1 `I'm Only Half!' Schooling and Strategies of Belonging Among Adolescents from Minority Ethnic Backgrounds in Russia |
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17 | (19) |
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17 | (3) |
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Schooling in Post-Soviet Russia as an Arena of Competing Nationhood Claims |
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20 | (3) |
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School Practices of Ethnic Ascription |
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23 | (4) |
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Strategies of Belonging: Portraits of Pupils |
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27 | (3) |
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`I Like to be Taken for a Tatar': Passing as a (Christianised) Tatar |
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30 | (3) |
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33 | (3) |
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2 Borders of a Borderland: Experiencing Identity in Moldova Today |
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36 | (21) |
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36 | (2) |
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State-Building and Nation-Building in Moldova |
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38 | (2) |
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Competing Identity Categories |
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40 | (4) |
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Nationalising Collective Memory in the Public Spaces |
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44 | (2) |
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46 | (1) |
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Transformations of Identity through the Lens of the Everyday |
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47 | (3) |
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Language, Asymmetrical Power Relations and Everyday Practices |
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50 | (3) |
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53 | (4) |
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3 Teaching the National through Geography and Nature: Banal Nationalism in Primary Schools in Serbia and Croatia |
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57 | (26) |
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57 | (3) |
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60 | (2) |
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Findings: Textbook Content Analysis |
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62 | (17) |
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Discussion and Conclusion |
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79 | (4) |
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4 Why Nations Sell: Reproduction of Everyday Nationhood through Advertising in Russia and Belarus |
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83 | (21) |
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83 | (4) |
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Nation-Building and Economic Transformations in Russia and Belarus: A Historical Background |
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87 | (3) |
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Advertising in Russia: Empire, Nation and In Between |
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90 | (6) |
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Advertising in Belarus: The Struggle for Banality |
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96 | (6) |
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102 | (2) |
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5 Money Can't Buy It? Everyday Geopolitics in Post-Soviet Russia |
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104 | (19) |
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104 | (2) |
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Why Presume Foreign Policy? |
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106 | (2) |
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108 | (3) |
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111 | (4) |
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115 | (3) |
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118 | (2) |
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120 | (3) |
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6 Turbofolk as a Means of Identification: Music Practices as Examples of the National in Everyday Life |
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123 | (21) |
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123 | (4) |
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The Setting for the Birth of Turbofolk |
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127 | (2) |
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Identification with Turbofolk |
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129 | (3) |
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Contradictions in Evaluating Turbofolk Music |
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132 | (2) |
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Impact of Turbofolk Music on its Consumers |
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134 | (1) |
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Autochthonous Turbofolk as an Illustration of Diasporic Identity |
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135 | (3) |
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`Turbofashion', `Turbostyle' |
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138 | (3) |
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141 | (3) |
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7 Something Bulgarian for Dinner: Bulgarian Popular Cuisine as a Selling Point |
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144 | (20) |
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144 | (2) |
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Why Food as a National Practice? |
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146 | (1) |
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What is Food as a National Consumption Practice? |
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147 | (2) |
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How to Read the Food as Text |
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149 | (4) |
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The Structure of the Menu: The Sign System |
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153 | (2) |
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The Words of the National Culinary Discourse |
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155 | (5) |
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The Twenty-First-Century Image of Bulgarian National Cuisine |
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160 | (4) |
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8 Making Modern Mongolians: Gender Roles and Everyday Nation-Building in Contemporary Mongolia |
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164 | (19) |
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Building a Nation for Mongolians |
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165 | (3) |
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Nomadism as Practice of Everyday Nation-Building |
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168 | (3) |
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Forging Ties to the Nation via Religious Practices |
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171 | (2) |
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173 | (3) |
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Contribution of Women to Mongolian Everyday Nation-Building |
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176 | (4) |
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180 | (3) |
Conclusion When Post-Socialism Meets the Everyday |
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183 | (6) |
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Bibliograpby |
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189 | (22) |
Index |
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211 | |