TY - JOUR N2 - Emanuela Grama's Socialist Heritage: The Politics of Past and Place in Romania is a compelling exploration of heritage making as state-making through the lens of the postwar and postcommunist transformations of Bucharest's Old Town. Alternatively known as Lipscani or 'the historic center,' the Old Town is a revealing lens because the socialist and postsocialist states mediated their relation with their citizens - their strategies of inclusion and exclusion - via place and material structures like buildings and objects. The book thus joins a growing body of historical ethnographies of socialist and postsocialist transformations, particularly those on property restitution, changing regimes of value, and collectivization like Katherine Verdery's The Vanishing Hectare (2003) and Gail Kligman and Katherine Verdery's Peasants Under Siege (2011) or works on elite changes and continuities such as Szelenyi's "Circulation or Reproduction of Elites" (1995). VL - 81 N1 - This version is the author accepted manuscript. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher?s terms and conditions. SN - 0037-6779 ID - discovery10178240 AV - public JF - Slavic Review EP - 227 SP - 226 UR - https://doi.org/10.1017/slr.2022.109 TI - Socialist Heritage: The Politics of Past and Place in Romania [By Emanuela Grama. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2019. xviii, 268 pp. Notes. Bibliography. Index. Illustrations. Photographs. Tables. Maps. $60.00, paper] IS - 1 Y1 - 2022/// A1 - Georgescu, Diana PB - CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS ER -