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Borderlands: Nation and Empire - Hardcover

 
9780571198153: Borderlands: Nation and Empire
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Turkish or European? European or Muslim? Muslim or Communist? Such were the identities that Scott Malcomson found people grappling with as he traveled through Eastern Europe, Turkey and Central Asia. Learning the languages and immersing himself in the cultures, Malcomson focused on the tensions between local and universal identity in these countries that are historically at the margins of empires and currently on the faultlines of civil war.
In these borderlands, the conflict between nation and empire plays itself out on the world stage only when it reaches crisis proportion. But the issues swirling around these outposts have remained unresolved since the land was first divided two thousand years ago by kings and despots.
In Borderlands, young Romanian anti-Semites and Muslim fundamentalists speak alongside peasant farmers and privileged schoolgirls and offer their own perspectives on the age-old conflicts. Malcomson encounters Sufi mystics in Bukhara and rootless cosmopolitans at a Bulgarian disco. Whether at a Romanian coal mine or around the neighborhood in Tashkent, he resists easy judgments; instead, he listens and learns.
Part historical essay, part reportage, part philosophical speculation, Borderlands is a stunningly innovative work that explores a world that can no longer claim fixed points of reference.

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From Kirkus Reviews:
An impressionistic effort--sometimes engaging, sometimes rather fey--to understand the conflict between nation and empire in the borderlands of Eastern Europe and the Middle East. Malcomson, a Village Voice senior editor, also wrote Tuturani (1990). Malcomson spent 1991 and '92 traveling through Romania, Bulgaria, Turkey, and Uzbekistan, learning the languages and immersing himself in each culture. A little awkwardly, he reports his impressions in the second person (``you enter...'') in a short and episodic form that's part history, part conversation, and part analysis. There is a common theme of confusion and uncertainty as each of the countries attempts to cope with the collapse of communism, with new forms of government, and with the dominant and sometimes overwhelming influence of the West. ``Romania,'' Malcomson remarks, ``was less a coherent zone than a primeval highway to somewhere else.'' Similarly, the President of Uzbekistan, one of the countries now broken away from the former Soviet Union, portrays the country as a ``suffering marginalized victim one day, cradle of humanity the next; at once Turkic, Muslim, Asian, and modern.'' This uncertainty prevails even in Turkey, where, as a result of the impact of Kemal Ataturk, the future has been seen in Western terms, but with a pervasive fear that Europe might regard the Turks as Asiatic. In this part of the world, nationalism has been a relatively recent development, in Turkey the creation of Ataturk in this century, in Bulgaria as a 19th-century reaction to the Ottoman Empire. Often, Malcomson reports today's conflicts entertainingly (``In war and religion there is much to be said for lunacy''), though sometimes altogether too elliptically (``The fact that one can be an Alvei-Bektashi Kizibas doesn't lead to scholarly clarity. But what, in the realm of saints and miracles, does?''). In all, entertaining while also episodic and abstruse. -- Copyright ©1994, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
From Publishers Weekly:
Malcomson, author of Tuturani and an editor at the Village Voice , reports on the borderland identities of people living in Romania, Bulgaria, Turkey and Uzbekistan in the early 1990s. Recently freed (in most cases) from communist dominion, these countries are experiencing an intense nationalism, but for what traditions? Their pasts are woven in a tapestry with heritages that include ancient marauders, Greeks, Romans, Asiatics; the civilizations embrace Muslim, Christian, fascist, racist, agrarian and communist traditions. Today the desire to join the European Community is tempered by a deep ambivalence toward the values and powers of the West. Malcomson, who traveled in these countries in 1991-1992, brilliantly combines personal encounters with an erudite, wide description of the countries' disparate pasts. Vivid and engaging as a current document, the book is also a rich historical and political review of four unique civilizations now determining their future directions.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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  • PublisherFaber & Faber
  • Publication date1994
  • ISBN 10 0571198155
  • ISBN 13 9780571198153
  • BindingHardcover
  • Edition number1
  • Number of pages289
  • Rating

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Malcomson, Scott L.
ISBN 10: 0571198155 ISBN 13: 9780571198153
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Book Description Hardcover. Condition: New. Dust Jacket Condition: New. 1st Edition. First edition 1994. Signed by Author on title page without inscription. Published by Faber & Faber. Hardcover with DJ. Condition new, square tight and crisp book, no edgeear, corners not bumped, no markings of any kind, no names, no underlinings, no highlights, no bent page corners, not a reminder. DJ new, bright and shiny, no edgewear, no tears, no chips, price not clipped. 8vo, 256 pages. Signed by Author(s). Seller Inventory # 006724

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