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(Post)Sovetskaia Infrastruktura: Politika Pamiati, Identichnosti i Emotsii na BAMe

Author(s)
Olga Povoroznyuk
Abstract

The Baikal-Amur Mainline (BAM), a railroad that crosses the northern areas of East Siberia and the Far East, was the last largest Soviet infrastructure project. Its construction in the 1970s and the 1980s propelled by ideological propaganda and material incentives attracted labour migrants from different parts of the USSR. Currently, BAM builders or bamovtsy constitute the majority in a number of settlements along the railroad. Against the background of the socio-economic crisis and the ideological shift following the dissolution of the USSR, the BAM project was publicly criticized. Due to the growing transportation of resources extracted in the region, the programme of its reconstruction (or BAM-2) was launched in 2014. It is aimed at building the second railway track and is, in fact, a continuation of unfinished Soviet construction plans.

The article focuses on infrastructure as an embodiment of collective memory, identity and emotions. The emotionally charged memory of the BAM construction period plays a key role in reproduction and reinforcement of local residents' identities and constitutes non-material aspects of the BAM infrastructure in the post-Soviet period. Comparative analysis of the projects of BAM and BAM-2 unravels the temporality of infrastructure where promises and failures of modernization, boom and bust, construction, destruction, and reconstruction constitute the life cycle of the railroad and of the people entangled with it. The article is based on field materials including focus group discussions, biographical interviews, and archival records gathered in the cities of Tynda and Severobaikal'sk and in the town of Novaia Chara in 2013 and 2016 to 2018.

Organisation(s)
Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Journal
Sibirskie Istoricheskie Issledovaniya
Volume
2020
Pages
32-47
No. of pages
16
ISSN
2312-461X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.17223/2312461X/29/3
Publication date
2020
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
504017 Cultural anthropology, 504009 Ethnology
Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Anthropology, History, Archaeology, Archaeology
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/efd110ac-a08c-4d61-9bef-b4bc61468a94