41. Details in this and the next paragraph are taken from Clarke et al., “Russian Dacha.”
Fully compatible with Clarke’s conclusions is H.T. Seeth, S. Chachnov, A. Surinov,
and J. von Braun, “Russian Poverty: Muddling Through Economic Transition with Garden
Plots,”
World Development 26 (1998), 1611–23.42. Vagin, “Russkii provintsial’nyi gorod,” 55.
43. Simagin, “Ekonomiko-geograficheskie aspekty,” chap. 2.
44. For a definition of the Soviet city as an “entirely separate category of urban settlement,”
see R. A. French, “The Individuality of the Soviet City,” in
The Sodalist City: Spatial Structure and Urban Policy, ed. French and F. E. I. Hamilton (Chichester, 1979), esp. 101–2. For a succinct
“typology of socio-economic and environmental differentiation in the larger Soviet
city,” see D. M. Smith, “The Socialist City,” in Cities after Socialism: Urban and Regional Change and Conflict in Post-Socialist Societies, ed. G. Andrusz, M. Harloe, and I. Szelenyi (Oxford, 1996), esp. 82–84.45. On the steady erosion of the greenbelt in the 1970s and 1980s, see Colton, Moscow
, 468–85.46. For an early example, see A. Neverov, “Chem pakhnet na Medvezh’ikh ozerakh?” Moskovskii komsomolets
, 15 Sept. 1990, 2. For an inside account of the boom in the dacha plot market, I
am indebted to an unpublished memoir by Vadim Kulinchenko, who between 1988 and 1991
served on the ispolkom of a settlement in an area that was especially attractive to
the unofficial property developers of late Soviet Russia. According to Kulinchenko,
in these years the dacha “was a matter not of relaxation in the country but purely
of property. The local authorities were showered with blows from everyone up to the
very highest levels of state power . . . , and in the localities people buckled.”47. I am grateful to Rachael Mann for showing me her B.A. dissertation, “Moscow’s Suburbia
or Exurbia?” (University of Glasgow, 1998), where these results are laid out. My own
interviews and questionnaire results suggest a similarly mixed picture.
48. See J. Bater, Russia and the Post-Soviet Scene: A Geographical Perspective
(London, 1996), 150–51.49. See Wegren, Agriculture and the State
, esp. 163–64.50. O. Kostiukova, “Dachi sovetskikh pisatelei po-prezhnemu v tsene,” Segodnia
, 8 June 1998.51. D. Zhelobanov and A. Grigor’ev, “Dachniki i dachevladel’tsy ishchut drug druga bez
posrednikov,”
Delovoi Peterburg, 26 May 1999.52. The statistical comparison is made in Struyk and Angelici, “Russian Dacha Phenomenon,”
247.
53. A. Aleksandrova, “Novoe dachnoe myshlenie,” Obshchaia gazeta
, 31 July 6 Aug. 1997. Note also glossy lifestyle magazines such as Dom & dacha (put out by the Burda publishing house from 1995), and the dacha furniture advertised
at <http://www.dos.ic.sci-nnov.ru/gorodez/english/str31.htm>. The commitment of New Russians to what they probably thought of as a manorial way
of life at the dacha is suggested by their common insistence on wood-fired heating
rather than the much more low-maintenance gas (thanks to Judith Pallot for this observation).54. Struyk and Angelici, “Russian Dacha Phenomenon,” 243.
55. In 1999, for example, dacha designs were displayed at an exhibition in Saratov (a
selection of the designs were posted at <
http://www.expo.saratov.ru/rism>).56. On abandoned plots in Leningrad oblast, see R. Maidachenko, “Est’ svobodnye uchastki,”
SPb ved, 27 Apr. 1999.57. Vagin, “Russkii provintsial’nyi gorod,” 75–76.
58. Struyk and Angelici, “Russian Dacha Phenomenon,” 240.
59. Nikiforova, “Mesto pod solntsem,” 2.
60. “Iuridicheskaia konsul’tatsiia,” Dachnyi kaleidoskop
, no. 7–8 (1992), 1.61. “Voina na ogorodakh,” Dachnyi kaleidoskop
, no. 9–10 (1992), 1.62. Vera Popova, “Zona vne zakona,” Chas u dachi
, no. 2, supplement to Peterburgskii chas pik, 6 May 1999.63. “Ob osnovakh federal’noi zhilishchnoi sfery” (24 Dec. 1992), sec. 2, art. 9, in
Dachnoe khoziaistvo, 80; N. Kalinin, “Dacha dolzhna byt’ ‘V zakone,’” Trud, 11 Nov. 1997.64. A. Litvinov, “Kommunalki na bolote,” Rossiiskaia gazeta
, 8 Aug. 1997, 8.