Soil and Soul
How Russia's Minority Communities Create Meaning and Identity
University of Wisconsin Press
Will be published approx. on 5. January 2027
Book
Hardback
208 pages
978-0-299-35850-1 (ISBN)
Description
By landmass, Russia is the world's largest country, due mainly to centuries of military expansion and colonization. As a result, it contains people of many ethnicities, nationalities, and religions-and yet social minorities have been mostly disregarded or repressed by governmental policy and ignored in scholarship. This volume explores how ethnically non-Russian peoples develop and sustain their local and ethnic identities through embodied relations with nonhuman elements such as land, animals, and sacred sites rather than through discourse or state institutions. In fact, these local efforts challenge the Kremlin's "master narrative" of Russian cultural superiority. These nonhuman entities persist undeniably as an ever-present source of meaning and identity creation in spite of an autocratic centralized state. Using decolonial, anthropological, environmental, sociological, linguistic, and geographic case studies, this volume reframes minority agency as ecosocial practice embedded in local ecologies and postimperial power asymmetries.
Reviews / Votes
"Theoretically innovative and richly drawn. Readers will be captivated by the myriad details about lives in contemporary Russia that we too rarely hear about." - Kate Graney, Skidmore CollegeMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
Wisconsin
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
13 color illus.
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-299-35850-1 (9780299358501)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Yana Hashamova is Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor of Slavic Studies and a professor of theater, film, and media arts. She holds an affiliate professorship in comparative studies; women's, gender, and sexuality studies; and the Mershon Center for International Security Studies at The Ohio State University. She is the author of Screening Trafficking: Prudent and Perilous? and a coeditor of Cultures of Mobility and Alterity: Crossing the Balkans and Beyond, among others.
Gulnaz Sharafutdinova is a professor of Russian politics and the director of the King's Russia Institute at King's College London. She is the author of The Afterlife of the "Soviet Man": Rethinking Homo Sovieticus, The Red Mirror: Putin's Leadership and Russia's Insecure Identity, and Political Consequences of Crony Capitalism Inside Russia, and a coeditor of Soviet Society in the Era of Late Socialism, 1964-1985.
Gulnaz Sharafutdinova is a professor of Russian politics and the director of the King's Russia Institute at King's College London. She is the author of The Afterlife of the "Soviet Man": Rethinking Homo Sovieticus, The Red Mirror: Putin's Leadership and Russia's Insecure Identity, and Political Consequences of Crony Capitalism Inside Russia, and a coeditor of Soviet Society in the Era of Late Socialism, 1964-1985.
Content
List of Illustrations
Introduction
Yana Hashamova and Gulnaz Sharafutdinova
1. From a Demonic Animal to a Political Ally: Native Cattle as a Site of Ethnonationalist Projections Among Sakha
Zoia Tarasova
2. The Throbbing Heart of the Grassland: Turning the Shihan Hills into Sacred Sites for the Bashkir People
Jesko Schmoller
3. Kalmyks in Southwest Russia: Geography, Sacred Sites, and Memory in Shaping Ethnic Identity
Baasanjav Terbish
4. Bringing Bodies Back to the Soil: Contemporary Vaynakh Repatriation Practices
Kristina Kovalskaya
5. Exploring Human-Nonhuman Relations in Vepsian Ritualized Speech
Laura Siragusa
6. Mapping Socio-Ecological Interactions in Russia's Hinterland: Grounding the Study of Diversity
Megan Dixon
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Contributors
Index
Introduction
Yana Hashamova and Gulnaz Sharafutdinova
1. From a Demonic Animal to a Political Ally: Native Cattle as a Site of Ethnonationalist Projections Among Sakha
Zoia Tarasova
2. The Throbbing Heart of the Grassland: Turning the Shihan Hills into Sacred Sites for the Bashkir People
Jesko Schmoller
3. Kalmyks in Southwest Russia: Geography, Sacred Sites, and Memory in Shaping Ethnic Identity
Baasanjav Terbish
4. Bringing Bodies Back to the Soil: Contemporary Vaynakh Repatriation Practices
Kristina Kovalskaya
5. Exploring Human-Nonhuman Relations in Vepsian Ritualized Speech
Laura Siragusa
6. Mapping Socio-Ecological Interactions in Russia's Hinterland: Grounding the Study of Diversity
Megan Dixon
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Contributors
Index