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Familiar Strangers - The Georgian Diaspora and the Evolution of Soviet Empire (Paperback)
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Familiar Strangers - The Georgian Diaspora and the Evolution of Soviet Empire (Paperback)
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A small, non-Slavic country located far from the Soviet capital,
Georgia has been more closely linked with the Ottoman and Persian
empires than with Russia for most of its history. One of over one
hundred officially classified Soviet nationalities, Georgians
represented less than 2% of the Soviet population, yet they
constituted an extraordinarily successful and powerful minority.
Familiar Strangers aims to explain how Georgians gained widespread
prominence in the Soviet Union, yet remained a distinctive national
community. Through the history of a remarkably successful group of
ethnic outsiders at the heart of Soviet empire, Erik R. Scott
reinterprets the course of modern Russian and Soviet history. Scott
contests the portrayal of the Soviet Union as a Russian-led empire
composed of separate national republics and instead argues that it
was an empire of diasporas, forged through the mixing of a diverse
array of nationalities behind external Soviet borders. Internal
diasporas from the Soviet republics migrated throughout the
socialist empire, leaving their mark on its politics, culture, and
economics. Arguably the most prominent diasporic group, Georgians
were the revolutionaries who accompanied Stalin in his rise to
power and helped build the socialist state; culinary specialists
who contributed dishes and rituals that defined Soviet dining
habits; cultural entrepreneurs who perfected a flamboyant
repertoire that spoke for a multiethnic society on stage and
screen; traders who thrived in the Soviet Union's burgeoning
informal economy; and intellectuals who ultimately called into
question the legitimacy of Soviet power. Looking at the rise and
fall of the Soviet Union from a Georgian perspective, Familiar
Strangers offers a new way of thinking about the experience of
minorities in multiethnic states, with implications far beyond the
imperial borders of Russia and Eurasia.
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