ISBN: 9782847431124This article explores the indigenization of the representation of Soviet Central Asia in Russian-language literature by examining how two Central Asian literary figures—the “Tajik” poet Abulqasim Lahuti and the Kazakh bard Džambul Džabaev were promoted in Russian in the mid-1930s. More specifically, it discusses the canonization of Lahuti and Džambul within the Soviet literary system in 1935 and 1936, arguing that it occurred when each performed in Moscow and demonstrated his ability to serve Stalin’s “friendship of peoples” both as a translated court poet and an embodiment of the East, which is to say as an untranslatable source text.PostprintPeer reviewe
PrefaceThe present work employs the detailed study of one case to illustrate a pattern that may well...
After the 1917 Revolution, the new Soviet state was trying to accommodate local nationalisms by crea...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.After the collapse of the Soviet Union, all of the newly indep...
This article explores the indigenization of the representation of Soviet Central Asia in Russian-lan...
Russian Orientalists participated—often in a close but precarious relationship with the state—in the...
AbstractThis article is devoted to the literary contribution of well-known Kazakh poet Abai Kunanbay...
A massive shift from the Socialist Realism that predominated under Joseph Stalin, the bard culture t...
© Journal of Language and Literature. The article reveals the literary works and events of the XX - ...
In their article Introduction to the Work of Uygur Poet Bakhtiya Dilfuza Rozieva and Anna Oldfield...
The article deals with the poet and statesmen who lived and worked in Khorezm in the XIV-XX centurie...
This article is devoted to the analyzing the literary career of Chingiz Aitmatov in the context of c...
Various disciplines and area studies might benefit from this investigation, aside from the...
Bhavna Dave relies upon three different streams of scholarly enquiry (“the new Western historiograph...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2004.This dissertation is concerned with the ongoing proc...
This article intends to make a contribution to our understanding of how the Russian empire was shape...
PrefaceThe present work employs the detailed study of one case to illustrate a pattern that may well...
After the 1917 Revolution, the new Soviet state was trying to accommodate local nationalisms by crea...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.After the collapse of the Soviet Union, all of the newly indep...
This article explores the indigenization of the representation of Soviet Central Asia in Russian-lan...
Russian Orientalists participated—often in a close but precarious relationship with the state—in the...
AbstractThis article is devoted to the literary contribution of well-known Kazakh poet Abai Kunanbay...
A massive shift from the Socialist Realism that predominated under Joseph Stalin, the bard culture t...
© Journal of Language and Literature. The article reveals the literary works and events of the XX - ...
In their article Introduction to the Work of Uygur Poet Bakhtiya Dilfuza Rozieva and Anna Oldfield...
The article deals with the poet and statesmen who lived and worked in Khorezm in the XIV-XX centurie...
This article is devoted to the analyzing the literary career of Chingiz Aitmatov in the context of c...
Various disciplines and area studies might benefit from this investigation, aside from the...
Bhavna Dave relies upon three different streams of scholarly enquiry (“the new Western historiograph...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2004.This dissertation is concerned with the ongoing proc...
This article intends to make a contribution to our understanding of how the Russian empire was shape...
PrefaceThe present work employs the detailed study of one case to illustrate a pattern that may well...
After the 1917 Revolution, the new Soviet state was trying to accommodate local nationalisms by crea...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.After the collapse of the Soviet Union, all of the newly indep...