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Despite Cultures examines the strategies and realities of the
Soviet state-building project in Tajikistan during the 1920s and
1930s. Based on extensive archival research, Botakoz Kassymbekova
analyzes the tactics of Soviet officials at the center and
periphery that produced, imitated, and improvised governance in
this Soviet southern borderland and in Central Asia more generally.
She shows how the tools of violence, intimidation, and coercion
were employed by Muslim and European Soviet officials alike to
implement Soviet versions of modernization and industrialization.
In a region marked by ethnic, linguistic, and cultural diversity,
the Soviet plan was to recognize these differences while subsuming
them within the conglomerate of official Soviet culture. As
Kassymbekova reveals, the local ruling system was built upon an
intricate network of individuals, whose stated loyalty to communism
was monitored through a chain of command that stretched from Moscow
through Tashkent to Dushanbe/Stalinabad. The system was tenuously
based on individual leaders who struggled to decipher the language
of Bolshevism and maintain power through violent repression.
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