Image for Lviv's Uncertain Destination : A City and Its Train Terminal from Franz Joseph I to Brezhnev

Lviv's Uncertain Destination : A City and Its Train Terminal from Franz Joseph I to Brezhnev

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Lviv’s Uncertain Destination examines the city’s tumultuous twentieth-century history through the lens of its main railway terminal.

Whereas most existing studies of eastern European cities centre their stories on discrete ethnic groups, milestone political events, and economic changes, this book’s narrative is woven around an important site within the city’s complex spatial matrix.

Combining architectural, economic, social, and everyday life history, Andriy Zayarnyuk shows how different political regimes created dissimilar social spaces even on the same streets and in the same buildings.

His narrative leads us to rethink how the late imperial Habsburg and Romanov, Stalinist and post-Stalinist Soviet, interwar Polish, and Nazi German regimes produced, structured, and controlled urban space.

Focusing on railway workers, the book also draws attention to the history of Lviv’s wage earners, who constituted the majority of the city’s adult population.

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Product Details
University of Toronto Press
1487505191 / 9781487505196
Hardback
947.79
12/12/2019
Canada
English
392 pages, 55 b&w illustrations
159 x 236 mm, 690 grams