Uzbek


The Devils' Dance
The Railway
The Dead Lake
Making Uzbekistan: Nation, Empire, and Revolution in the Early USSR
Inside Central Asia: A political and cultural history of Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkey, and Iran
Samarkand
Ikki ėshik orasi
We Computers: A Ghazal Novel
Dunyoning Ishlari
Days Gone By
Of Strangers and Bees
The Underground
A Collection of Uzbek Short Stories
Uzbekistan (Bradt Travel Guides)
Chasing the Sea: Lost Among the Ghosts of Empire in Central Asia
Supposedly troubled that women would no longer be treated as property, these man saw the hujum as another kind of expropriation, much like the land and water redistribution. One was quoted as saying that unveiling was merely an extension of Soviet land reform, since it aimed to seize the second, third, and fourth wives of bois and transfer them to the poor landless peasants who had to hire themselves out as field hands. (This was a common view, as many Uzbeks also saw the hujum as transferring w ...more
Douglas Northrop, Veiled Empire: Gender and Power in Stalinist Central Asia

Peter B. Golden
Russian authorities distinguished between steppe Islam, suffused, they believed, with Shamanism, and the Islam of the Uzbek cities, which they considered hotbeds of fanaticism. Catherine viewed Islam as a "civilizing" tool that would first make Kazakhs good Muslims, then good citizens, eventually good Christians. She used Tatar teachers, her subjects, who could travel among the nomads and speak their language, to preach a more "correct" Islam. The Tatars became an important factor in implanting ...more
Peter B. Golden, Central Asia in World History

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