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Global Urban History Project

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Kateryna L Malaia
 
Basic Information
Affiliation
University of Utah
Title
Assistant Professor
Address
375 S 1530 EAST

ARCH 332

Salt Lake City, UT  
84112
USA


Additional Information
About My Work
My work investigates the role of a home in the creation of the post-Soviet condition, and asks how socio-economic and political change transformed both dwellings and public ideas about the home. . Despite the long-term presence of dwellings in the socio-spatial discourse, home is often seen as a secondary space to the production of social change. Unlike urban public spaces, the spatiality and architecture of homes have not received the amount of attention they deserve in the context of this socio-political transformation. While I am currently focused on the post-Soviet Eastern European cities, the method of studying socio-political change through the transformation of domestic environments can be applied worldwide.
Citations
“Individually Generated Building Modifications in Response to Housing Precarity,” PLATFORM, December 16, 2019, https://www.platformspace.net/home/individually-generated-building-modifications-in-response-to-housing-precarity

“Monumental Landscapes and the Politics of Place: The First Lenin to Fall,” East/West: Journal of Ukrainian Studies, Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies, Volume V, No. 1 (2018)

“Not by Public Space Alone: Of Politics and Architects,” Lobby, Bartlett School of Architecture: London, 5 (2016)
Professional Associations
Society of Architectural Historians, The Association for Slavic, East European, & Eurasian Studies, Global Architectural History Teaching Collaborative