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Intermarriage from Central Europe to Central Asia examines the
practice and experience of interethnic marriage in a range of
countries and eras, from imperial Germany to present-day
Tajikistan. In this interdisciplinary volume Adrienne Edgar and
Benjamin Frommer have drawn contributions from anthropologists and
historians. The contributors explore the phenomenon of
intermarriage both from the top down, in the form of state policies
and official categories, and from the bottom up, through an
intimate look at the experience and agency of mixed families in
modern states determined to control the lives and identities of
their citizens to an unprecedented degree. Contributors address the
tensions between state ethnic categories and the subjective
identities of individuals, the status of mixed individuals and
families in a region characterized by continual changes in national
borders and regimes, and the role of intermarried couples and their
descendants in imagining supranational communities. The first of
its kind, Intermarriage from Central Europe to Central Asia is a
foundational text for the study of intermarriage and ethnic mixing
in Eastern Europe and Eurasia.
Intermarriage and the Friendship of Peoples examines the
racialization of identities and its impact on mixed couples and
families in Soviet Central Asia. In marked contrast to its Cold War
rivals, the Soviet Union celebrated mixed marriages among its
diverse ethnic groups as a sign of the unbreakable friendship of
peoples and the imminent emergence of a single "Soviet people." Yet
the official Soviet view of ethnic nationality became increasingly
primordial and even racialized in the USSR's final decades. In this
context, Adrienne Edgar argues, mixed families and individuals
found it impossible to transcend ethnicity, fully embrace their
complex identities, and become simply "Soviet." Looking back on
their lives in the Soviet Union, ethnically mixed people often
reported that the "official" nationality in their identity
documents did not match their subjective feelings of identity, that
they were unable to speak "their own" native language, and that
their ambiguous physical appearance prevented them from claiming
the nationality with which they most identified. In all these ways,
mixed couples and families were acutely and painfully affected by
the growth of ethnic primordialism and by the tensions between the
national and supranational projects in the Soviet Union.
Intermarriage and the Friendship of Peoples is based on more than
eighty in-depth oral history interviews with members of mixed
families in Kazakhstan and Tajikistan, along with published and
unpublished Soviet documents, scholarly and popular articles from
the Soviet press, memoirs and films, and interviews with Soviet-era
sociologists and ethnographers.
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