'This excellently crafted qualitative study demonstrates how class is a powerful affective force in contemporary Russian society. Alexandrina Vanke is to be congratulated on her subtle and wide ranging theoretical reflexivity and for her sensitive and empathetic approach.’Mike Savage, Professor of Sociology, London School of Economics‘Vanke’s research is as timely as it is painstaking. She effortlessly reveals the hidden life of political engagement and deep content of ‘ordinary peoples’ lives in this pathbreaking new ethnography of Russia.’Jeremy Morris, Professor of Global Studies, Aarhus University‘Drawing on a creative mix of Bourdieu, intersectionality theory and feminist geography, this deep study of postindustrial workers in contemporary Russia will challenge and enrich your views of class, everyday politics and the city.’Loïc Wacquant, Professor of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley'Through a multidimensional analysis of “workers’ urban life and everyday struggles”, Alexandrina Vanke aims to counter dismissive attitudes toward subordinate groups by showing how they resist a hostile neoliberal world in multiple creative ways. Rejecting notions of “Russian workers’ patience” based on narrow understandings of class conflict in terms of industrial conflict, the author provides examples of creative resistance inspired by a practical consciousness embedded in class-based imaginaries that reveal their awareness of a deeply divided and unequal social structure.'Claudio Morrison, The Russian Review 'Vanke succeeds in making the case that despite popular stereotypes, Russia’s workers are not passive or slumbering. They are actively engaged in everyday struggle. This, combined with the creative methodologies employed, is the main strength of the work. On the whole, the book provides a humanizing close-up of post-Soviet Russian workers actively shaping their lives and surroundings in their specific urban context.' International Sociology'Vanke’s book is an example of immersive, prolonged ethnography enriched by creative methodologies and a deep engagement with the lived experiences of Russia’s urban working class.'Viktoria Kobzeva, CEU Review of Books '... by delving into the messy linkages between imaginations of the past, present and future, the book opens up a different terrain of thinking about political action - one often overshadowed by elite politics. At its core, it underscores the idea that resistance can never be confined to those who explicitly gather and act in its name.'Arpita Rachel Abraham, Doing Sociology'One of the main achievements of the book lies in its successful attempt to re-discuss the concept of class. In fact, on a theoretical level, Vanke effectively shows how class in Russia means something different when compared, for example, to Western societies.'Mitja Stefancic, Network magazine by the British Sociological Association '... a theoretically rich, empirically grounded contribution to the sociology of class and urban life in authoritarian contexts. It equips readers with a lens to move beyond dominant narratives that cast Russian society as politically apathetic or passive and instead calls for a more attentive exploration of the everyday struggles of subordinate groups.'Anna Shadrina, Sociology Claudio Morrison