Can one be nostalgic for the home one never had? Why is it that the age
of globalization is accompanied by a no less global epidemic of
nostalgia? Can we know what we are nostalgic for? In the seventeenth
century, Swiss doctors believed that opium, leeches, and a trek through
the Alps would cure nostalgia. In 1733 a Russian commander, disgusted
with the debilitating homesickness rampant among his troops, buried a
soldier alive as a deterrent to nostalgia. In her new book, Svetlana
Boym develops a comprehensive approach to this elusive ailment.
Combining personal memoir, philosophical essay, and historical analysis,
Boym explores the spaces of collective nostalgia that connect national
biography and personal self-fashioning in the twenty-first century. She
guides us through the ruins and construction sites of post-communist
cities -- St. Petersburg, Moscow, Berlin, and Prague-and the imagined
homelands of exiles-Benjamin, Nabokov, Mandelstam, and Brodsky. From
Jurassic Park to the Totalitarian Sculpture Garden, from love letters on
Kafka's grave to conversations with Hitler's impersonator, Boym unravels
the threads of this global epidemic of longing and its antidotes.