Laura L. Adams offers unique insight into nation building in Central Asia during the post-Soviet era through an exploration of Uzbekistan’s production of national culture in the 1990s. As she explains, after independence the Uzbek government maintained a monopoly over ideology, exploiting the remaining Soviet institutional and cultural legacies. The state expressed national identity through tightly controlled mass spectacles, including theatrical and musical performances. Adams focuses on these events, particularly the massive outdoor concerts the government staged on the two biggest national holidays, Navro’z, the spring equinox celebration, and Independence Day. Her analysis of the content, form, and production of these ceremonies shows how Uzbekistan’s cultural and political elites engaged in a highly directed, largely successful program of nation building through culture. Adams draws on her observations and interviews conducted with artists, intellectuals, and bureaucrats involved in the production of Uzbekistan’s national culture. These elites used globalized cultural forms such as Olympics-style spectacle to showcase local, national, and international aspects of official culture. While these state-sponsored extravaganzas were intended to be displays of Uzbekistan’s ethnic and civic national identity, Adams found that cultural renewal in the decade after Uzbekistan’s independence was not so much a rejection of Soviet power as it was a re-appropriation of Soviet methods of control and ideas about culture. The public sphere became more restricted than it had been in Soviet times, even as Soviet-era ideas about ethnic and national identity paved the way for Uzbekistan to join a more open global community.
This volume illustrates how Tanner was able to accomplish this feat: from a detailed account of his personal and professional background that provided a foundation for success; the historical and contemporary context in which the Fish ...
Sutter's the guy you want at your party.
Crossword puzzles encourage students in grades three through six to recall facts provided in informational passages on each of the fifty United States.
... spectacular state violence as by the tactics of the retail outlets themselves. Failing UPPs, arrastões, rolezinhos—all suggest that violence, spectacle, and commodification will continue to be central to unfolding social dynamics in Rio ...
DIVThis study analyzes a popular festival and vigilante lynching, examining them as a form of political spectacle performed by improverished people who want to gain access to the potential benefits of citizenship in a modern city./div ...
THIS IS A PICTURE BOOK.
For a summary of the various growth strategies pursued by urban elites , see David Harvey , Consciousness and the Urban Experience ( Oxford : Basil Blackwell , 1985 ) , 268 , and John Logan and Harvey Molotch , Urban Fortunes , 258-77 .
... state and state policing. This reliance on the state creates the space for adaptive agency, one which is less likely to disrupt the status quo. My interlocutors had more opportuni- ties to “grow out” of their old ways and become ...
In his introduction to the Gallimard-Folio reedition of the work in 1974, Pierre Gascar also emphasizes the distance the text establishes from the Romantic historical tradition. Gascar and Patrick Berthier, who wrote the notes for the ...
From its publication amid the social upheavals of the 1960's, in particular the May 1968 uprisings in France, up to the present day, with global capitalism seemingly staggering around in it’s Zombie end-phase, the volatile theses of this ...