40 episodes

We are a multigenerational, multilingual, Tbilisi based collective. Our goal is to reexamine and rearticulate the history of Soviet Georgia by producing and supporting critical research, including oral and written histories, and a podcast for both Georgian and English speaking audiences.

Reimagining Soviet Georgia Reimagining Soviet Georgia

    • History
    • 4.4 • 30 Ratings

We are a multigenerational, multilingual, Tbilisi based collective. Our goal is to reexamine and rearticulate the history of Soviet Georgia by producing and supporting critical research, including oral and written histories, and a podcast for both Georgian and English speaking audiences.

    Episode 38: Post-Socialist Mortality Crisis with Gabor Scheiring

    Episode 38: Post-Socialist Mortality Crisis with Gabor Scheiring

    The collapse of socialism in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union unleashed an unprecedented mortality crisis. In the years following, the region endured upwards of 7.5 million excess (and thus preventable) deaths. This post-socialist mortality crisis was not only the result of the economic devastation and social fracturing caused by socialism's end, but was exacerbated by the political-economic commitment to market orthodoxy and austerity of post-socialist elites, leading to wide spread socio-economic, physical and mental immiseration.



    On today's episode we welcome Gábor Scheiring to discuss how this post-socialist mortality crisis emerged, its political implications for today, and what types of methodologies are most effective for researching these topics and more in post-socialist countries.



    Gabor is an Assistant Professor of Comparative Politics at Georgetown University Qatar, currently on sabbatical as a Visiting Fellow at Harvard University, Center for European Studies. His research addresses the lived experience and political economy of contemporary capitalist transformations using quantitative, qualitative, and comparative methods. His work analyzes how economic shocks fuel precarity, leading to mental and physical suffering, and how these processes affect the stability of democracy. As a member of the Hungarian Parliament (2010-2014), he advocated for a socially just transition to sustainability.



    Gabor's website:



    https://www.gaborscheiring.com/

    • 1 hr 27 min
    Episode 37: Georgian Film, Emigration and Post Soviet Life with Levan Koguashvili

    Episode 37: Georgian Film, Emigration and Post Soviet Life with Levan Koguashvili

    One of Georgia's most exciting contemporary filmmakers is Levan Koguashvili. His films are as comedic as they are tragic, focusing on the intricacies (both beautiful and heartbreaking) of the day to day struggles Georgians live through today.



    In this discussion, we explore Levan's approach to filmmaking, stories behind the scripts, and the way his films reflect economic and social realities both in Georgia and of those Georgians who have emigrated abroad.



    Levan is a film director from Tbilisi and his films include Brighton 4th (2021), Gogitas New Life (2016), Blind Dates (2013) and Street Days (2010).

    • 1 hr 9 min
    Episode 36: Tea Production in Soviet Georgia with Camille Neufville

    Episode 36: Tea Production in Soviet Georgia with Camille Neufville

    On today's episode we discuss the emergence of the Georgian tea industry and how its development interacted with processes of economic, political and national consolidation in the first decades of the Georgian SSR.



    Our guest is Camille Neufville. Camille is a PhD student at Strasbourg university, France. She is interested in the entangled histories of exotic commodities, their production and consumption in northern Eurasia. She's currently writing her PhD on tea consumption and tea production in Imperial and Soviet Georgia. Her main research questions include land and labor issues, the limits of state control, and subsistence economics in the Western Caucasus.

    • 1 hr 2 min
    Episode 35: Dollarization in Georgia with Ia Eradze

    Episode 35: Dollarization in Georgia with Ia Eradze

    On today's episode we sit down with political economist Ia Eradze to discuss how extreme rates of dollarization in Georgia emerged after the Soviet Union's demise, why dollarization persists, as well as how the dominance of neoliberal economic policies and exclusion of socio-economic issues from the public and political discourse in post-Soviet Georgia came to be.



    Below is a description of Eradze's 2023 book Unraveling Dollarization Persistence: The Case of Georgia followed by a link to an article which summarizes the book's main arguments:



    The book engages with the persistence of foreign currency domination at the example of Georgia. Unofficial dollarization remains a challenge for developing countries, as it increases the vulnerability of households, firms and governments with foreign currency debt, limits monetary sovereignty, threatens financial and political stability and hinders economic development. These issues have become even more evident during the Covid 19 pandemic through the increasing debt in foreign currency. This monograph provides a political economic analysis of dollarization and conceptualises dollarization through a state theory, in which Georgia is framed as a peripheral hybrid state. The book is structured around three themes: genesis of dollarization (1991-2003), dollarization persistence (2003-2012) and politicization of dollarization (2012-2019). Thus, the history and persistence of foreign currency domination is explained through embedding dollarization into political debates, governance tactics, policies and institutions, economic interests, accumulation regime, civil society, global processes and interests of international actors.



    https://www.phenomenalworld.org/analysis/unraveling-dollarization/



    Ia Eradze is an associate professor at the Georgian Institute of Public Affairs and a CERGE-EI Foundation teaching fellow. She is also a researcher at the Institute for Social and Cultural Studies at the Ilia State University. Ia holds a PhD in social and economic sciences from the University of Kassel. She is a political economist with research interest in finance and state formation in the post-socialist space. Ia has worked as a researcher at ZZF Potsdam and was an invited scholar at Harvard University, Sciences Po, Trinity College and University of Vienna.

    • 1 hr 14 min
    Episode 34: The Mass Protest Decade and the Missing Revolution with Vincent Bevins

    Episode 34: The Mass Protest Decade and the Missing Revolution with Vincent Bevins

    On today's episode we sit down with journalist and author Vincent Bevins to discuss his recent book If We Burn: The Mass Protest Decade and the Missing Revolution. This wide reaching conversation reviews the main themes and topics of his book, and the broader political lessons and reflections that the global social movements between 2010-2020, with an emphasis on those outside of the global North, can provide today.



    Here's a description of If We Burn



    "From 2010 to 2020, more people participated in protests than at any other point in human history. Yet we are not living in more just and democratic societies as a result. IF WE BURN is a stirring work of history built around a single, vital question: How did so many mass protests lead to the opposite of what they asked for? From the so-called Arab Spring to Gezi Park in Turkey, from Ukraine’s Euromaidan to student rebellions in Chile and Hong Kong, acclaimed journalist Vincent Bevins provides a blow-by-blow account of street movements and their consequences, recounted in gripping detail. He draws on four years of research and hundreds of interviews conducted around the world, as well as his own strange experiences in Brazil, where a progressive-led protest explosion led to an extreme-right government that torched the Amazon. Careful investigation reveals that conventional wisdom on revolutionary change is gravely misguided. In this groundbreaking study of an extraordinary chain of events, protesters and major actors look back on successes and defeats, offering urgent lessons for the future."



    Bevins is also the author of The Jakarta Method: Washington's Anticommunist Crusade and the Mass Murder Program that Shaped Our World

    • 1 hr 56 min
    Episode 33: Vacations, Sanatoria and the Soviet Dream with Diane P. Koenker

    Episode 33: Vacations, Sanatoria and the Soviet Dream with Diane P. Koenker

    On today's episode we sit down with historian Diane P. Koenker to discuss the history, development and role of vacations, sanatoria and leisure in the Soviet Union.



    Koenker is the author of the 2013 study on the topic, Club Red: Vacation, Travel and the Soviet Dream

    • 1 hr 13 min

Customer Reviews

4.4 out of 5
30 Ratings

30 Ratings

jmsalvatore ,

Worth it for the guests.

Georgia is a small country in the Caucasus of about 4 million people bordering Russia, Turkey, Armenia and Azerbaijan. The Georgian language is part of the Kartvelian language family and is unrelated to other language families outside the region. It is also an incredibly difficult language to learn. Although the Georgian people punched above their weight in Soviet politics, economics and culture, due to the two above-mentioned factors, English-language scholarship on Georgia is somewhat scarce (especially scholarship accessible to a more general audience that goes beyond being a broad history introduction). Thankfully though, as with any niche field, those inside it really know their stuff and, given the chance, are happy to share their knowledge. Which explains why a new podcast such as Reimaging Soviet Georgia can from its inception land many eminent specialists in their fields. And valuably, 80% of the podcasts runtime is composed of these scholars, speaking eloquently at length, in detail, and with much nuance about their research. It is an enjoyable and insightful listen, even for someone already familiar with their writings.

Unfortunately the other 20% of the podcast consists of the hosts/creators, who primarily and hamfistedly try to steer the conversation toward apologism for the Soviet State and Western NGO bashing. It is amusing though how the guests generally sidestep, don’t indulge in the hosts’ political agenda.

Recommend episodes (so far): episode 1, part 1 - The State if Soviet History with Timothy Blauvelt; episode 2 - Soviet Georgian Migrants, Memory and Rivers with Jeff Sahadeo; episode 3 - Stalin, Social Democracy and Georgia with Ronald Grigor Suny; episode 4 - The First Republic with Stephen F. Jones; episode 7 - The Soviet World of Soviet Georgians with Erik Scott; episode 9 Abkhaz Mobilization in the Georgian-Abkhaz War with Anastasia Shesterinina; episode 13 - Women & Film in Early Soviet Georgia with Salome Tsopurashvili; episode 16 - The 2008 Russo-Georgian War with Gerard Toal

Colerain15707 ,

Gem of a Podcast

The hosts are well spoken and successful in their mission to tell their story and the little known story of a little known place in the world. I am always excited to see a new episode.

MattM8649 ,

A podcasts for tankies that miss the USSR

I’ve listened to a few podcasts because they have some interesting guests and there aren’t many podcasts about Georgia, but the hosts’ view seems to be “why do people always bring up the gulags and repression and stagnation in the Soviet Union…don’t you the Communists had their hearts in the right place?” 😭

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