Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
5. “What Are They Doing? After All, We’re Not Germans”: Expulsion, Belonging, and Postwar Experience in the Caucasus
-
Claire P. Kaiser
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface vii
- List of Illustrations ix
- Introduction: Belonging in the Eurasian Borderlands 1
- 1. Making Minorities in the Eurasian Borderlands: A Comparative Perspective from the Russian and Ottoman Empires 17
-
Part One: Negations of Belonging
- 2. Bloody Belonging: Writing Transcaspia into the Russian Empire 35
- 3. The Armenian Genocide of 1915: Lineaments of a Comparative History 48
- 4. “Do You Want Me to Exterminate All of Them or Just the Ones Who Oppose Us?”: The 1916 Revolt in Semirech′e 65
- 5. “What Are They Doing? After All, We’re Not Germans”: Expulsion, Belonging, and Postwar Experience in the Caucasus 80
-
Part Two: Belonging via Standardization
- 6. Developing a Soviet Armenian Nation: Refugees and Resettlement in the Early Soviet South Caucasus 97
- 7. Reforming the Language of Our Nation: Dictionaries, Identity, and the Tatar Lexical Revolution, 1900–1970 112
- 8. Speaking Soviet with an Armenian Accent: Literacy, Language Ideology, and Belonging in Early Soviet Armenia 129
-
Part Three: Belonging and Mythmaking
- 9. Making a Home for the Soviet People: World War II and the Origins of the Sovetskii Narod 147
- 10. Dismantling “Georgia’s Spiritual Mission”: Sacral Ethnocentrism, Cosmopolitan Nationalism, and Primordial Awakenings at the Soviet Collapse 162
- 11. New Borders, New Belongings in Central Asia: Competing Visions and the Decoupling of the Soviet Union 182
- Conclusion 199
- Notes 207
- Contributors 261
- Index 263
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface vii
- List of Illustrations ix
- Introduction: Belonging in the Eurasian Borderlands 1
- 1. Making Minorities in the Eurasian Borderlands: A Comparative Perspective from the Russian and Ottoman Empires 17
-
Part One: Negations of Belonging
- 2. Bloody Belonging: Writing Transcaspia into the Russian Empire 35
- 3. The Armenian Genocide of 1915: Lineaments of a Comparative History 48
- 4. “Do You Want Me to Exterminate All of Them or Just the Ones Who Oppose Us?”: The 1916 Revolt in Semirech′e 65
- 5. “What Are They Doing? After All, We’re Not Germans”: Expulsion, Belonging, and Postwar Experience in the Caucasus 80
-
Part Two: Belonging via Standardization
- 6. Developing a Soviet Armenian Nation: Refugees and Resettlement in the Early Soviet South Caucasus 97
- 7. Reforming the Language of Our Nation: Dictionaries, Identity, and the Tatar Lexical Revolution, 1900–1970 112
- 8. Speaking Soviet with an Armenian Accent: Literacy, Language Ideology, and Belonging in Early Soviet Armenia 129
-
Part Three: Belonging and Mythmaking
- 9. Making a Home for the Soviet People: World War II and the Origins of the Sovetskii Narod 147
- 10. Dismantling “Georgia’s Spiritual Mission”: Sacral Ethnocentrism, Cosmopolitan Nationalism, and Primordial Awakenings at the Soviet Collapse 162
- 11. New Borders, New Belongings in Central Asia: Competing Visions and the Decoupling of the Soviet Union 182
- Conclusion 199
- Notes 207
- Contributors 261
- Index 263