The Heritage of Soviet Oriental Studies

Front Cover
Michael Kemper, Stephan Conermann
Routledge, Feb 1, 2011 - Literary Criticism - 352 pages

This book examines the Russian/Soviet intellectual tradition of Oriental and Islamic studies, which comprised a rich body of knowledge especially on Central Asia and the Caucasus. The Soviet Oriental tradition was deeply linked to politics – probably even more than other European ‘Orientalisms’. It breaks new ground by providing Western and post-Soviet insider views especially on the features that set Soviet Oriental studies apart from what we know about its Western counterparts: for example, the involvement of scholars in state-supported anti-Islamic agitation; the early and strong integration of ‘Orientals’ into the scientific institutions; the spread of Oriental scholarship over the ‘Oriental’ republics of the USSR and its role in the Marxist reinterpretation of the histories of these areas. The authors demonstrate the declared emancipating agenda of Soviet scholarship, with its rhetoric of anti-colonialism and anti-imperialism, made Oriental studies a formidable tool for Soviet foreign policy towards the Muslim World; and just like in the West, the Iranian Revolution and the mujahidin resistance to the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan necessitated a thorough redefinition of Soviet Islamic studies in the early 1980s. Overall, the book provides a comprehensive analysis of Soviet Oriental studies, exploring different aspects of writing on Islam and Muslim history, societies, and literatures. It also shows how the legacy of Soviet Oriental studies is still alive, especially in terms of interpretative frameworks and methodology; after 1991, Soviet views on Islam have contributed significantly to nation-building in the various post-Soviet and Russian ‘Muslim’ republics.

 

Contents

List of Contributors
The Imperial Roots of Soviet Orientology
Profiles Under Pressure Orientalists in PetrogradLeningrad 19181956
Between the Language of Humanity and latinizatsiia Nikolai Marr and
Soviet Kurdology and Kurdish Orientalism
Evgenii M Primakov Arabist and KGB Middleman Director and Statesman
Hijacking Islam The Search for a new Soviet Interpretation of Political Islam
Scholars Advisers and StateBuilders Soviet Afghan Studies in Light of Present
Arabic Historical Studies in TwentiethCentury Dagestan
The Politics of Scholarship and the Scholarship of Politics Imperial Soviet
Conceiving a Peoples History The 19201936 Discourse on the Kazakh Past
Ahmad Yasavi and the Divani hikmat in Soviet Scholarship
Kyrgyz Muslim Central Asian? Recent Approaches to the Study of Kyrgyz
Till Mostowlansky
Index
Copyright

The Struggle for the Reestablishment of Oriental Studies in TwentiethCentury

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About the author (2011)

Michael Kemper is Professor of Eastern European Studies at the University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

Stephan Conermann is Professor of Islamic Studies, and acting director of the Asia Center at the University of Bonn, Germany.