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Russian Central Asia in the Works of Nikolai Karazin, 1842-1908 - Ambivalent Triumph (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2021)
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Russian Central Asia in the Works of Nikolai Karazin, 1842-1908 - Ambivalent Triumph (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2021)
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"This book provides a deep reading of Nikolai Karazin's works and
his relationship with Central Asia. Elena Andreeva shows how
Karazin's prolific creations have much to tell us about Russian
imperialism, colonial and local society as well as Russians'
self-identity as colonizers and Europeans. The work offers an
original contribution to the scholarship on Russian imperial
history and that of Central Asia, and Russian literary history
also. Karazin's importance-at the time and now-is appropriately
highlighted." - Jeff Sahadeo, Associate Professor, Carleton
University, Canada "Elena Andreeva's book resurrects a vital if
forgotten figure from the Russian past: Nikolai Karazin, Russia's
Kipling, a multifaceted participant in Russian imperial expansion,
whose fiction, journalism, ethnography and visual representations
may well have done more than any agent of the Russian state to
represent and popularize Russia's conquest of Central Asia to a
newly literate Russian public beyond the educated elites.
Archivally based and carefully argued, Andreeva's study of Karazin
reveals the absence of any singular logic to Russian imperial
expansion. In her analysis Karazin emerges as a vernacular
enthusiast of empire who was able to reconcile a skeptical attitude
towards tsarist autocracy with an idealized view of Russia's
'civilizing' mission in the East." - Harsha Ram, Associate
Professor, University of California, Berkeley, USA This book is
dedicated to the literary and visual images of Central Asia in the
works of the popular Russian artist Nikolai Karazin. It analyzes
the ways Karazin's discourse inflected, and was inflected by, the
expansion of the Russian empire - and therefore sheds light on the
place of art and culture in the Russian colonial enterprise. It is
the first attempt to interpret Karazin's images of Central Asia
within Russian imperial networks and within the maze of the Russian
national identity that informed them.
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