Who gets the past? : competition for ancestors among non-Russian intellectuals in Russia
著者
書誌事項
Who gets the past? : competition for ancestors among non-Russian intellectuals in Russia
Woodrow Wilson Center Press , Johns Hopkins University Press, c1996
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 77-92) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
The diversion of scholarship on ethnicity by political forces has been studied in Nazi Germany, where folklore became central to national self-perception and consequently suffered from uncritical enthusiasms. This book studies this phenomenon in another arena. In the Middle Volga region of Russia, the intellectuals of two ethnic groups are engaged in a protracted competition for the right to claim descent from various ancestries, most dating back to the first millennium AD. Archaeologists from both the Chuvash and the Tatar ethnic groups are attempting to present evidence connecting the groups with Turkic-speakers, Finnish-Ugric groups, Bulgars, or Sarmatians. At stake, according to Victor Shnirelman, are both territorial and political advantages. This book tells how and why, from the Stalinist period to the present, these intellectuals have made different, sometimes self-contradictory, claims on the past.
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