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Regular version of the site
Master 2022/2023

Muslims, society, and authority in Russian Empire and USSR: The Caucasus

Type: Elective course (Global and Regional History)
Area of studies: History
When: 2 year, 1, 2 module
Mode of studies: offline
Open to: students of all HSE University campuses
Master’s programme: Global and Regional History
Language: English
ECTS credits: 3
Contact hours: 30

Course Syllabus

Abstract

What role does the Caucasus play in modern history of peripheral Muslim societies from the late eighteenth through the beginning of the twenty-first centuries? How did Muslims from the Caucasus enter the hybrid multiethnic Russian polity? What political, social and intellectual effects had the colonial conquest of the region by the Russian empire and subsequent Communist modernization undertaken in the name of anti-colonial struggle? What was the relationship between Caucasian Muslims, Russian state, and society? How and why did the secularist Soviet state attempt to regulate Islam, and what are consequences of such regulation? How did Muslims answered challenges of colonial and Soviet transformation? The class aims to provide students with a greater understanding of the diverse ways of narrating and practicing Islam in Russia’s Caucasus, and to discuss their consequences for social identities, relations of power and creating symbolic universes where believers live. As such this course is envisioned as a final part of the two-year the central historical discipline of the Master’s program “Muslim Worlds in Russia (History and Culture)”. Students are expected to have basic skills of historical source analysis and knowledge of world history and the history of Russia obtained at the bachelor’s (or specialists) level, and on the historiography courses taught in the master’s program. Based on Caucasian materials the course will allow students to master the problems of new imperial history, postcolonial studies and other modern historical approaches. The course shows regional specificity and diversity of Muslim communities in the Russian Empire and the USSR, as well as the politics of power in them. A special attention is paid to issues of regional governance during the imperial period, national delimitation and nation-building during the Soviet period, relations between the center and the Muslim borderlands of the polity, and especially issues of Muslim politics in Russia’s Caucasus, regional Muslim practices and identities. Having attended the course, students get a more nuanced and complete picture of the place of region in the Muslim worlds of modern Russia.
Learning Objectives

Learning Objectives

  • A student will know basic concepts and theories of Islamic and Russian studies and use them while analyzing social and religious issues in Russia’s Caucasus.
  • A student will evaluate the impact of the Empire and Soviet Communism on the development of Muslim societies in modern Caucasus.
  • A student will be able to analyze broader key problems of global history of empires including interdisciplinary fields of postcolonial studies, imaginative geography and historical anthropology on the Caucasian data.
Expected Learning Outcomes

Expected Learning Outcomes

  • Students should analyse principal reference works, and critically evaluate contribution of this key literature in the development of Islamic and Caucasus studies
  • Students must critically approach the aspects and stages of mental mapping of Islam in Russia’s Caucasus, and explain its importance for modern history of Muslim societies in the region
  • Students are required to analyse diverse narratives of the Russian conquest of the Caucasus. They must be able to analyze historical sources and literature on Muslim resistance critically.
  • Students must systemise the paths for indirect and direct colonial rule in the Caucasus, and be able to compare them with similar regimes in Russia and abroad.
  • Students must analyze cultural consequences of colonialism.
Course Contents

Course Contents

  • Approaches to and views of Islam in Russia’s Caucasus revised following the Archival revolution in the 1990s
  • Mental mapping of Muslim Caucasus in tsarist and Soviet Russia
  • Muslim resistance in (post-)colonial political imagination
  • Muslim shrines in cultural memory and political imagination
  • Imperial governance of Muslim “aliens” in the inner frontier of tsarist Russia
  • Orientalism in Russia’s Caucasus
  • Caucasus Muslims in Soviet modernization and nation-building
  • Islamic practices in a Soviet kolkhoz
  • Islamic “revival” in the context of post-Soviet desecularization
  • Rise and decline of jihadism in nowadays Caucasus
Assessment Elements

Assessment Elements

  • non-blocking Работа на семинарах
  • non-blocking Рецензия на книгу
  • non-blocking Презентация
  • non-blocking Итоговое эссе
Interim Assessment

Interim Assessment

  • 2022/2023 2nd module
    0.25 * Презентация + 0.45 * Итоговое эссе + 0.15 * Рецензия на книгу + 0.15 * Работа на семинарах
Bibliography

Bibliography

Recommended Core Bibliography

  • For prophet and tsar : Islam and empire in Russia and central Asia, Crews, R. D., 2006
  • Imagined communities: reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism, Anderson, B., 2006
  • Michael Kemper, & Stephan Conermann. (2011). The Heritage of Soviet Oriental Studies. Routledge.
  • Russian orientalism : Asia in the Russian mind from Peter the Great to the emigration, Schimmelpenninck van der Oye, D., 2010
  • The Russian conquest of the Caucasus, Baddeley, J. F., 2011

Recommended Additional Bibliography

  • "Собственный Восток России" : политика идентичности и востоковедение в позднеимперский и раннесоветский период: пер. с англ., Тольц, В., 2013
  • Jihad : the trail of political islam, Kepel, G., 2009
  • Kalinovsky, A. M., & Kemper, M. (2015). Reassessing Orientalism : Interlocking Orientologies During the Cold War. Abingdon, Oxon [UK]: Routledge. Retrieved from http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&site=eds-live&db=edsebk&AN=955727
  • The Islamic threat to the Soviet state, Bennigsen, A., 2011