Hibridinė sovietinio laikotarpio Lietuvos visuomenės modernizacija : monografija

The transformation of Lithuanian agriculture from collective farming to market economy took place under extraordinary conditions. A transformation from a socialist state economy to a capitalist market economy was a very distinct development alternative for a modern society. A return to a market econ...

Бүрэн тодорхойлолт

-д хадгалсан:
Номзүйн дэлгэрэнгүй
Үндсэн зохиолчид: Leonavičius, Vylius, Žilys, Apolonijus, Baltrušaitytė, Giedrė
Формат: Online
Хэл сонгох:литва
Хэвлэсэн: Vytautas Magnus University 2026
Нөхцлүүд:
Онлайн хандалт:https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/177118
Шошгууд: Шошго нэмэх
Шошго байхгүй, Энэхүү баримтыг шошголох эхний хүн болох!
Тодорхойлолт
Тойм:The transformation of Lithuanian agriculture from collective farming to market economy took place under extraordinary conditions. A transformation from a socialist state economy to a capitalist market economy was a very distinct development alternative for a modern society. A return to a market economy is not the same thing as a transformation into a new market economy. It is a specific transformation of past experiences into a new direction for the future. On the other hand, neither the Lithuanian society nor its agriculture or rural population were an exception in Central and Eastern Europe. All postsocialist countries faced similar challenges of transformational development. Lithuania differed from the other Central European societies (and was similar to the other Baltic States) because of its soviet past. The countries that were forcefully incorporated into the Soviet Union experienced incomparably more repressions from the totalitarian state and an incomparably greater transformation of their societies and all areas of life. A typological description of a return to a market economy reflects in a rather broad manner the particular development of a difficult transition. This transformation can be analysed from the perspective of entangled modernity and its consequences – hybrids. This reveals the universal processes of modern societies and their consequences, as well as the particular experiences of the region. It also explains the human and material losses tied to the specific type of transformation. From the perspective of entangled modernity and its consequent hybrids, the collective agriculture in Lithuania is a result of an entanglement between the colonial soviet model and the local rural economy, technology, society and culture. Collective agriculture was, first and foremost, aimed at accommodating the needs of the centralised soviet system. [...]