MacFadyen, David. 2006. Russian Culture in Uzbekistan: One Language in the Middle of Nowhere. Central Asian Studies Series, vol. 6. London: Routledge. A 162 pages. ISBN 978 04153 4134
Russian Orientalists participated—often in a close but precarious relationship with the state—in the...
La présente thèse explore les relations entre culture et politique à travers l’histoire de l’Union d...
In 1839, the Prince Odoevsky wrote a piece of fantasy, entitled The Year 4338. It was a surrealist f...
In Making Uzbekistan, Adeeb Khalid chronicles the tumultuous history of Central Asia in the age of t...
This dissertation considers the foundation of discourses of Orientalism and Postcolonialism in repre...
Amidst post-Soviet Central Asia's economic stagnation and political instabilities of the 1990s, Uzbe...
References to the spirituality-morality (ma’naviyat) of the Uzbek people increased substantially thr...
This paper does not intend to be an exercise in prognosis. Nor will I try to analyse Russia in an in...
This article intends to make a contribution to our understanding of how the Russian empire was shape...
This dissertation examines the development of Uzbek literature across the 20th century, using it as ...
Bhavna Dave relies upon three different streams of scholarly enquiry (“the new Western historiograph...
As the Soviet Union dissolved into a new territorial reality, it released the doubly repressed histo...
The present article examines Andrei Bitov’s Lessons of Armenia (Uroki Аrmenii) and A Georgian Album ...
The crisis of Soviet power in Central Asia: The 'Uzbek cotton affair', 1975-1991 aims at reconstruct...
During the late 1920s, the Soviet state launched a wide-ranging campaign in Central Asia, called the...
Russian Orientalists participated—often in a close but precarious relationship with the state—in the...
La présente thèse explore les relations entre culture et politique à travers l’histoire de l’Union d...
In 1839, the Prince Odoevsky wrote a piece of fantasy, entitled The Year 4338. It was a surrealist f...
In Making Uzbekistan, Adeeb Khalid chronicles the tumultuous history of Central Asia in the age of t...
This dissertation considers the foundation of discourses of Orientalism and Postcolonialism in repre...
Amidst post-Soviet Central Asia's economic stagnation and political instabilities of the 1990s, Uzbe...
References to the spirituality-morality (ma’naviyat) of the Uzbek people increased substantially thr...
This paper does not intend to be an exercise in prognosis. Nor will I try to analyse Russia in an in...
This article intends to make a contribution to our understanding of how the Russian empire was shape...
This dissertation examines the development of Uzbek literature across the 20th century, using it as ...
Bhavna Dave relies upon three different streams of scholarly enquiry (“the new Western historiograph...
As the Soviet Union dissolved into a new territorial reality, it released the doubly repressed histo...
The present article examines Andrei Bitov’s Lessons of Armenia (Uroki Аrmenii) and A Georgian Album ...
The crisis of Soviet power in Central Asia: The 'Uzbek cotton affair', 1975-1991 aims at reconstruct...
During the late 1920s, the Soviet state launched a wide-ranging campaign in Central Asia, called the...
Russian Orientalists participated—often in a close but precarious relationship with the state—in the...
La présente thèse explore les relations entre culture et politique à travers l’histoire de l’Union d...
In 1839, the Prince Odoevsky wrote a piece of fantasy, entitled The Year 4338. It was a surrealist f...