Dr Dace Dzenovska

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Dace Dzenovska
Dr Dace Dzenovska

Associate Professor in the Anthropology of Migration

Fellow at Kellogg College

Trained as a social and cultural anthropologist at the University of California in Berkeley, I work mostly with themes in political anthropology and anthropology of postsocialism: space, place, and power, sovereignty, empire, capitalism, migration, liberalism and nationalism, and the intersection of postsocialist and postcolonial/decolonial perspectives. I have conducted ethnographic fieldwork in Latvia and the United Kingdom, but engage with work on Russia and Eastern Europe more broadly. 

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My first book School of Europeanness: Tolerance and Other Lessons in Political Liberalism (2018, Cornell University Press) examines efforts to instil liberal political virtues in the Latvian society and political institutions as part of postsocialist liberalization and democratization initiatives. The book argues that Eastern Europe should be viewed as a laboratory for the forging of post-Cold War political liberalism in Europe.

Currently, I am leading a research project on emptying places in Latvia, Armenia, Russia, and Ukraine. The project aims to understand what it means to live in and govern places that are losing their constitutive elements, as well as what such places can tell us about how changing forms of capitalism and political authority produce space as an emptying place. I am also making a documentary film that extends my research on emptiness beyond the postsocialist world and focuses on locations in the UK, Italy, and Germany in addition to Romania and Latvia.

Alongside the research project on emptiness, I am writing a book entitled Empires We Choose: Sovereignty and Migration in Europe's Peripheries. The book is based on ten years of research on the mobility of people and capital to and from Latvia and the United Kingdom.

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