Fiction, Memory, and Ethnic Politics in the South Caucasus

Author:   Mikail Mamedov ,  Peter Orte ,  Nona Shahnazarian ,  Ulvi Ismayil
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781032980157


Pages:   210
Publication Date:   30 September 2025
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
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Fiction, Memory, and Ethnic Politics in the South Caucasus


Overview

The book explores the aftermath of the disintegration of the Soviet Union and the effects of war and nationalism in the South Caucasus. While the Soviet Union’s dissolution seemed to promise democracy and liberalization, the rise of nationalist movements in Armenia and Azerbaijan led to those countries becoming undemocratic monoethnic states, which ethnically cleansed their largest minorities. During the violence of the first stage of the Karabakh War (1992–1994), Armenians were expelled from Azerbaijan, and Azerbaijanis were expelled from Armenia. The persistence of this violent conflict through the second (2020) and third (2023) stages has led to competing, incompatible national narratives and an entrenched imagination of the other as the enemy. Explaining these events’ historical context by tracing them back to specific Soviet and Tsarist policies, the contributors of this volume examine the impact of the Karabakh conflict on ordinary people’s lives in Armenia and Azerbaijan by analyzing fiction, film, and other forms of public memory. Ultimately, they show how “eternal enmity” is a myth and point to potential solutions to the conflict. This study will be useful to students and scholars of Soviet and Post-Soviet History, Nationalism, Empire, and Conflict Studies.

Full Product Details

Author:   Mikail Mamedov ,  Peter Orte ,  Nona Shahnazarian ,  Ulvi Ismayil
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.570kg
ISBN:  

9781032980157


ISBN 10:   103298015
Pages:   210
Publication Date:   30 September 2025
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

Introduction, “Broken Chains: Mapping the Transition from Diverse Authoritarianism to Homogeneous Autocracy” Part I Historiography, Politics, and Memory: A Historians' War 1. ""An obsession with the remote ancestors: Politics of Ethnogenesis as a Legitimization of New Nation-States in the Southern Caucasus"" 2. ""Collective Narratives of an Enduring Rivalry: Memory, History, and Peace in the Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict"" Part II Reel Rivalries: Depicting the 'Other,' Past and Present 3. “From Reel to Real: Exploring National Identity in Soviet Azerbaijani Cinema"" 4. ""The Construction of the Other: The Depiction of Azerbaijanis in Contemporary Armenian Cinema"" Part III Literature in Search of Peace and Mutual Understanding 5. ""At the Dawn of the Conflict: Jafar Jabarly’s In 1905 in Search of an Elusive Peace” 6. ""Monuments and Everyday Moments: National Literature, Three Poets, and the Future of Azerbaijan” 7. ""Yemen, or the Face of the World"" Instead of Conclusion: Is there light at the end of the tunnel? 8. “Surviving the Storm: Moments of Peace for Armenians and Azerbaijanis in Georgia”

Reviews

""This book is a small miracle: it explores the long-running Nagorny Karabakh/Artsakh dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan by combining academic discourses that too often exist in isolation. Threading together current conversations in history, sociology, international peacebuilding, literature, and cinema studies, these writers examine some of the toughest issues that define the post-Soviet world. How does one build a successful twenty-first-century state? What role should nationalism based on ethnic identity play in state-building? How is collective memory created and shaped? Who benefits when artists use their art for political ends? What is the role of dissent in the post-Soviet context? How do local disputes affect diaspora communities? In this remarkable book, Mamedov et al. shine new light on seemingly intractable issues that bedevil not just the Caucasus region, but the wider world beyond."" -- Katherine E. Young, translator of Akram Aylisli, Poet Laureate Emerita, Arlington, Virginia, USA


""This book is a small miracle: it explores the long-running Nagorny Karabakh/Artsakh dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan by combining academic discourses that too often exist in isolation. Threading together current conversations in history, sociology, international peacebuilding, literature, and cinema studies, these writers examine some of the toughest issues that define the post-Soviet world. How does one build a successful twenty-first-century state? What role should nationalism based on ethnic identity play in state-building? How is collective memory created and shaped? Who benefits when artists use their art for political ends? What is the role of dissent in the post-Soviet context? How do local disputes affect diaspora communities? In this remarkable book, Mamedov et al. shine new light on seemingly intractable issues that bedevil not just the Caucasus region, but the wider world beyond."" -- Katherine E. Young, translator of Akram Aylisli, Poet Laureate Emerita, Arlington, Virginia, USA ""There is a steadily growing academic literature on various aspects of the South Caucasus. This ambitious book is an especially valuable addition to this body of knowledge, as it cuts across culture, historiography and politics to give us a unique account of how cultural voices have both fuelled and challenged narratives of conflict in a region, where protracted war and its legacy continues to negatively define its past and present. Combining well-known authoritative names, such as Viktor Shnirelman with newer voices from Armenia, Azerbaijan, Poland, and the United States, the volume critically changes our understanding of these issues with nuanced and innovative works of scholarship."" -- Thomas de Waal, Senior Fellow, Carnegie Europe, author of The Caucasus an Introduction and Black Garden, Armenia and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War ""A collection of papers by prominent experts who have published extensively about the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the volume is special in that it explores the wider context of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, and Armenians and Azerbaijanis. Rather than focus exclusively on politics, it looks through the lens of other social sciences - anthropology, sociology, history, and international relations. As a result, the volume succeeds in presenting the reader with a wide gamut of perspectives reflecting the contexts and positions of different countries and scholarly traditions. This makes this volume stand out among a multitude of publications that present partial views based on hand-picked evidence."" -- Alexander Iskandaryan, Director Caucasus Institute


Author Information

Mikail Mamedov, of dual Armenian–Azerbaijani heritage, explores the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict through personal and scholarly lenses. Educated at Moscow Lomonosov State University (Diploma), George Washington University (MA), and Georgetown (Ph.D.), he teaches and writes on Caucasus history. Despite health challenges, he continues his work, including Zoom roundtables on the conflict since 2023. Peter Orte is a visiting professor of Russian at Williams College. He received his Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and spent three years as an English teacher in Baku, Azerbaijan. His research focuses on 19th–20th-century Russian literature and the South Caucasus. He has published articles on the work of Tolstoy, Lermontov, Nijinsky, and Akram Aylisli. Nona Shahnazarian is a senior researcher at Armenia’s National Academy of Sciences and leads the PCenter for Independent Social Research Armenia. She has conducted fieldwork across the ‘Caucasus and Russia, focusing on gender, war, migration, and memory. A former visiting fellow at Stanford and Michigan, she directs the Women in War Think Tank in Yerevan. Ulvi Ismayil is an independent historian and researcher based in Washington, DC. Originally from Baku, he earned a Master’s degree in Public Policy from the University of Minnesota in 2005. His published research explores common stereotypes in Azerbaijani rhetoric regarding the conflict with Armenia, the role of writers, literary depictions of the pursuit of peace, and misguided efforts at heroization.

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