The Pubs оf Yerevan аs Spaces оf Post-Soviet Transformation

Authors

  • Lilit Babayan Yerevan State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.46991/BYSU:F/2020.11.1.024

Keywords:

pub, post-Soviet transformation, narrative semiotics, representations of space, ideology, capitalism, socialism, liberalism, conservatism

Abstract

The article describes a study conducted in Yerevan (Armenia) of pubs as a specific urban space formed in the post-Soviet period. The aim of the study was to identify the codes of the post-Soviet transformation. Narrative interviews with pub founders were analyzed using Greimas's narrative semiotic analysis combined with Lefebvre's theory of space production. The results of the study showed that ideological transformations such as the movement from socialism to capitalism and from conservatism to liberalism were reflected in the way the owners conceived and designed the pub space.

Author Biography

Lilit Babayan, Yerevan State University

PhD student and lecturer of the Chair of Theory and History of Sociology, YSU; laboratory assistant of the Laboratory of Applied Sociology, YSU

References

Lefebvre, H. & Nicholson-Smith, D. (1991) The production of space, Oxford: Blackwell Publishing,

Greimas, A. (2004) Strukturnaya semantika, poisk metoda, Moskow, Akademicheskii proekt.

Škorić, M., Kišjuhas, A., Škorić J. (2013) 'Excursus on the Stranger' in the Context of Simmel’s Sociology of Space, University of Novi Sad, Serbia, Sociológia, Vol. 45, No. 6, pp. 589-602;

Tilly Ch. (1974) An Urban World, Little, Brown, University of Michigan.

Harvey, D. (2003) The right to the city. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 27, pp. 939-941. Doi: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0309-1317.2003.00492.x

Güney Ü. (2015) Between Bohemia and Resistance: Immigrants’ Pubs In Hamburg‐Germany, Abant Izzet Baysal University, Bolu, Turkey.

Wedemeyer G. (1990) Kneipe und politische Kultur, Pfaffenweiler,Germany: Centaurus Ver-lagsgesellschaft, 31

Cabras I. & Mount M.P. (2017) How third places foster and shape community cohesion, economic development and social capital: The case of pubs in rural Ireland, Journal of Rural Studies, Volume 55, p. 73. Doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrurstud.2017.07.013

Park R. E. (1928) Human Migration and the Marginal Man, American Journal of Sociology33, No. 6, pp. 891-892. Doi: https://doi.org/10.1086/214592

Gayo-Cal, M. (2006) Leisure and participation in Britain, Cultural Trends, 15:2-3, pp. 175-192. Doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/09548960600713015

Järvinen M., Ellergaard Ch. H., & Larsen A. G. (2014) Drinking successfully: Alcohol consumption, taste and social status, Journal of Consumer Culture, Vol 14, Issue 3, pp. 384-405. Doi: https://doi.org/10.1177/1469540513491856

Roberts M. & Townshend T. (2013) Young adults and the decline of the urban English pub: issues for planning, Planning Theory & Practice, 14:4, pp. 455-469. Doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/14649357.2013.845683

Voslenskii M. (1990) Nomenklatura: Gospodstvuyuschii klass Sovetskogo Soyuza, Predislovie Milovana Djiliasa, Vtoroe izdanie, Overseas Publications Interchange Ltd London, p. 36.

Castells M. (2010) The power of identity: with a neq preface, volume II, Second edition, Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 43-44

Gaidar E.T. (2006) Gibel' imperii: uroki dlya sovremennoi Rossii. Moscow, ROSSPEN (Rossiiskaya politicheskaya enciklopediya), p. 158-173.

Iskandaryan, A. (2009) Armeniya: udrevlenie moderna, Nacional'nye istorii na postsovetskom prostranstve -II, Pod. redakciei F. Bomsforda, G. G. Bordyugova, Moscow, Fond Fridrikha Naumana, AIRO-XXI, pp. 227-228.

Zubkova, E. & Kupriyanov, A. (2003) Vozvrashenie k 'russkoi idee': krizis identichnosti nacional'naya istoriya, Nacional'nye istorii na postsovetskom prostranstve -II, Pod. redakciei F. Bomsforda, G. G. Bordyugova, Moscow, Fond Fridrikha Naumana, AIRO-XXI, p. 318.

Downloads

Published

2020-06-25

How to Cite

Babayan, L. (2020). The Pubs оf Yerevan аs Spaces оf Post-Soviet Transformation. Journal of Sociology: Bulletin of Yerevan University, 11(1 (31), 24–35. https://doi.org/10.46991/BYSU:F/2020.11.1.024

Issue

Section

Articles