Samarkand, located along the Silk Road, has a history that is often confused with a fabled image of the East. This book, however, deals with a real city, narrating the changes that took place while it was part of the USSR and in the period following, all the way up to the present. In Samarkand, the passage between these two eras reflects the broader transformation that affected Uzbekistan and the other Central Asian countries, which were internal colonies, first of Russia and then of the Soviet Union, before becoming independent states. Step by step, the reader enters the city, its various districts, private homes, public places, and hears the stories of diverse individuals and families.
Based on archival records, interviews and photographs, the book traces the changes in cultures and ways of life in Samarkand over this period, and investigates the tensions of the post-Soviet years. The Russians vanished from the city they had colonised or guided through the years of Soviet “modernisation”, as did many populations that had been deported there during the Second World War, and various local minorities. The city experienced a period of profound crisis, was transformed in terms of the composition of its population, constructed a new national image, rewrote its history and finally emerged ready to receive tourists with their cameras.
Détails du livre
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Éditeur
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Texte original
Oui -
Langue
Anglais -
Langue d'origine
Italien -
Date de publication
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Nombre de pages
358 -
Collection
À propos de l'auteur
Marco Buttino
Marco Buttino è professore di Storia dell’Oriente europeo presso l’Università di Torino. È autore di numerose opere su vari aspetti della storia sociale dell’URSS e dell’Asia Centrale. Tra le sue pubblicazioni più recenti: La rivoluzione capovolta. L’Asia centrale tra il crollo dell’impero zarista e la formazione dell’Urss, Napoli 2003 (traduzione in russo 2008) and Minorities in Samarkand: A Case Study of the City’s Koreans, in «Nationalities Papers»/, 37, 5 (2009).
Marco Buttino is professor of Eastern European History at the University of Turin. He has written extensively on various aspects of the social history of the USSR and Central Asia. Among his recent publications: La rivoluzione capovolta. L’Asia centrale tra il crollo dell’impero zarista e la formazione dell’Urss, Naples 2003 (Russian translation 2008) and, on Samarkand, Minorities in Samarkand: A Case Study of the City’s Koreans, in «Nationalities Papers», 37, 5 (2009).