
Rewriting the Nation in Modern Kazakh Literature: Elites and Narratives
Alva Robinson
Diana T. Kudaibergenova
2017, Lexington Books, 978-1-49852-892-0, $95 hb.
In the early part of the 20th century, when Kazakhstan was transitioning from a Russian tsarist colonial outpost to a socialist republic in the Soviet Union, a movement of Kazakh intellectuals and political activists emerged. Known as the Alash, this group introduced the birth of both Kazakh literature and the Kazakh nation. The author, a Kazakh graduate of Cambridge University, examines the relationship of Kazakh modernity and nationalism, and the “cultural production of generations of pre-Soviet, Soviet, and post-Soviet writers in Kazakhstan.” Literature became the main “channel of communication, space of cultural production and rich canvas for remembering” the past. As Kazakhstan undergoes a Kazakh literature revival nearly 30 years after its independence in 1991, the book is a timely and valuable way for readers to become more familiar with the dynamism of the Kazakh cultural landscape over the past 100 years.
You may also be interested in...
.png?cx=0.44&cy=0.65&cw=382&ch=487.6595744680851)
Zeina Abirached’s Art Uncovers Urgency of Wisdom in Gibran’s The Prophet
Kahlil Gibran’s 1923 classic is given new life, as Abirached’s graphic novel blends Lebanese artistry with the late author’s timeless wisdom.
A Fresh Perspective on Senegal’s Photographic History
Author Giulia Paoletti’s Portrait and Place puts historical Senegalese photography in a fresh global context.