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From Conquest to Deportation: The North Caucasus under Russian Rule

✍ Scribed by Jeronim Perović


Publisher
Oxford University Press
Year
2018
Tongue
English
Leaves
492
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


This book is about a region on the fringes of empire, which neither Tsarist Russia, nor the Soviet Union, nor in fact the Russian Federation, ever really managed to control. Starting with the nineteenth century, it analyses the state's various strategies to establish its rule over populations highly resilient to change imposed from outside, who frequently resorted to arms to resist interference in their religious practices and beliefs, traditional customs, and ways of life. Jeronim Perovic offers a major contribution to our knowledge of the early Soviet era, a crucial yet overlooked period in this region's troubled history. During the 1920s and 1930s, the various peoples of this predominantly Muslim region came into contact for the first time with a modernising state, demanding not only unconditional loyalty but active participation in the project of 'socialist transformation'. Drawing on unpublished documents from Russian archives, Perovic investigates the changes wrought by Russian policy and explains why, from Moscow's perspective, these modernisation attempts failed, ultimately prompting the Stalinist leadership to forcefully exile the Chechens and other North Caucasians to Central Asia in 1943/4

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Half-title
Title
Copyright
Contents
List of Illustrations
Glossary, Acronyms and Abbreviations
Note on Transliteration and Dating
Foreword
Introduction
1. Conquest and Resistance
2. Musa Kundukhov and the Tragedy of Mass Emigration
3. The North Caucasus Within the Russian Empire
4. Revolutions and Civil War
5. Illusion of Freedom
6. State and Society
7. The North Caucasus During Collectivisation
8. At the Fringes of the Stalinist Mobilising Society
9. Conformity and Rebellion
10. After Deportation
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index


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