A new review of Taking Stock of Shock

Architects of socialism built the Berlin Wall, symbolizing political unfreedom. When it fell, new walls emerged. Architects of neoliberal capitalism have built walls made of precarity and inequality, limiting what Eastern Europeans could do with their newly gained freedom. Scholarly walls separating disciplines inhibit us from correctly gauging the post-socialist landscape. Ghodsee and Orenstein’s new book, Taking Stock of Shock (Oxford University Press, 2021) breaks down these disciplinary walls and presents the most comprehensive assessment of the post-socialist transformation yet.

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A new typewriter for my collection

So I was in Montmartre yesterday and I was thinking that I should head out to one of Paris’s famous flea markets to do a little typewriter hunting. On my way to the metro, I popped into an antique shop and saw a pretty beat up Remington Portable, made in the USA for the German market with a QWERTZ keyboard, dating from the 1920s or 1930s. I think it’s a Portable #2, but I’m not sure yet because I haven’t located the serial number. In any event, I spoke to the proprietor in Spanish and it was clear he had no idea how the thing worked. (Paris tip: NEVER speak in English when you want to bargain for anything. The French are much nicer if you start in another language and then come to English as a third common language. They are very sensitive about English linguistic imperialism, and I really don’t blame them. All over Paris I hear Brits and Americans speaking loudly in English and just expecting locals to understand it.)

Anyway, I bargained for this lovely machine in Spanish, and the proprietor gave me a reasonable price for a machine in this condition. I am looking forward to restoring it and addition it to my growing collection.

Two more interviews in Spanish and Catalan from my days in Barcelona

Scenes from Paris with my former student and co-author Julia Mead

So delighted to see my former Bowdoin College student, Julia Mead, who is now a Ph.D. student in history at the University of Chicago. She is currently doing archival research in Prague and we rendezvoused in Paris for the Gender and Materiality conference at Sciences Po. We found some time to enjoy the pleasures of the City of Light –embracing the numinous!

New podcast episode with Rebecca Amsellem

After completely failing to post a podcast in the month of September, I finally had the opportunity to record one spontaneously last night with the wonderful French-Canadian feminist activist, Rebecca Amsellem. We were basically fan-girling about Kollontai and I asked if we could record a podcast on my phone. It was a fun conversation!

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In this episode, Kristen Ghodsee interviews the French-Canadian feminist activist and fellow Kollontai aficionado, Rebecca Amsellem in Paris, France. Rebecca is the editor of a well-known feminist newsletter in France, Les Glorieuses, and she has contributed an essay a forthcoming edited volume about the impact Alexandra Kollontai has had on her life and work. In this conversation, Ansellem discusses Kollontai's views on love and revolution as well as why Kollontai is not better known in France.

The edited collection is called: Une bibliothèque féministe, out in October 2021

Rebecca will be speaking at 18:30 at the librairie à République in Paris: "Lancement et rencontre avec Agathe le Tailandier pour son livre " Ma bibliothèque féminite" + invitées surprises!"

The Les Glorieuses newsletter is a great way to practice your French! Rebecca also publishes two newsletter in English. If you want to keep abreast of French feminist politics and economics, look no further:

Impact: https://lesglorieuses.fr/les-newsletters/impact-eng/
Economics: https://lesglorieuses.fr/les-newsletters/economics/

Two new interviews in Spain's La Vanguardia and El Salto (in Spanish and Catalan)

So I was in Barcelona for a discussion with Gemma Ruiz at the Finestres bookstore, and I met with many Spanish and Catalan journalists. The first two features published today.

¿Tienen las mujeres mejor sexo bajo el socialismo?

Kristen Ghodsee: “El capitalismo no respeta a las madres, pero nos necesita, ¿quién va a comprar iPhone si dejamos de tener bebés?”

My grandmother

My grandmother passed away today and I was thousands of miles away. I had not seen her since before the pandemic, but I did speak to her last night for the last time. She was almost 94 and she died quickly, but it still feels awful. I will never have her fried plantains again.

My grandma, my mom, and me in Puerto Rico in 1972

My grandma, my mom, and me in Puerto Rico in 1972

My grandma, me, and my mom in 1999

My grandma, me, and my mom in 1999

My grandma in 2021 with her pandemic hair

My grandma in 2021 with her pandemic hair

Medicine for the People and The Belgian Workers Party Headquarters in Antwerp

I spent an absolutely wonderful day with the folks at Medicine for the People in Antwerp and with the activists and party leaders of the Belgian Workers Party at the invitation of Peter Mertens. It was a fantastic day and I learned a lot!

Dr. Sofie Blancke, Maartje De Vries, and Kristen Ghodsee at Medicine for the People

Dr. Sofie Blancke, Maartje De Vries, and Kristen Ghodsee at Medicine for the People

COMAC activists: Apolline Dupuis (middle)

COMAC activists: Apolline Dupuis (middle)

Peter Mertens and Kristen Ghodsee

Peter Mertens and Kristen Ghodsee

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Nadine and Kristen

Nadine and Kristen