When a neighbourhood falls off the map: Jewish disappearance from Samarkand's Post-Soviet landscape

被引:0
作者
Cooper, Alanna E. E. [1 ]
机构
[1] Case Western Reserve Univ, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA
关键词
Samarkand; Bukhara; Uzbekistan; Central Asia; Bukharan Jews; ethnic neighbourhood; mahallah;
D O I
10.1080/14725886.2022.2090236
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
Established in 1843, the Jewish residential quarter in Samarkand (located at the time in the Bukharan kingdom, and today in independent Uzbekistan) has been emptied of its Jewish residents in the wake of the Soviet Union's demise. Since then, physical markers testifying to their history in the neighbourhood have also been eroding. This process has been organic, rather than a deliberate program of erasure. Still, these shifts in the built environment fit within Uzbekistan's larger project of state-building, as Jewish homes and communal structures belie the Russian and Soviet colonial legacy, which has been spurned since independence. Drawing on recent and historical accounts, as well as my own observations in the 1990s and in 2013, this article documents the built environment in the very moment of transition, as physical structures transform and are separated from the history and memories that enlivened them. With this disappearance, a tourist opportunity for encountering global Jewish diversity is lost, and Uzbekistan's project of nation-building - absent its historical minority populations - is further solidified.
引用
收藏
页码:347 / 370
页数:24
相关论文
共 48 条
  • [1] Abashin S, 2012, SOVIET AND POST-SOVIET IDENTITIES, P150
  • [2] Abramov M.M., 1993, BUKHARASIE EVREI SAM
  • [3] Ethnicity and the politics of heritage in Uzbekistan
    Adams, Laura L.
    [J]. CENTRAL ASIAN SURVEY, 2013, 32 (02) : 115 - 133
  • [4] Amitin-Shapiro Z. L., 1933, Ocherki sotsialisticheskogo stroitelstva sredi sredneaziatskikh evreev
  • [5] [Anonymous], 1957, EXILED REDEEMED
  • [6] Arshavsky Zoya., 2016, JEWISH ARCHITECTURE
  • [7] Arshavsky Zoya., 2010, JEWISH ARCHITECTURE, P219
  • [8] Avrutin EugeneM., 2009, PHOTOGRAPHING JEWISH
  • [9] Eastern Europe as the site of genocide
    Bartov, Omer
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MODERN HISTORY, 2008, 80 (03) : 557 - 593
  • [10] Bartov Omer, 2008, Erased: Vanishing Traces of Jewish Galicia in Present-day Ukraine