HAYASHI
Tadayuki, ed.,
The Construction and
Deconstruction of National Histories in Slavic Eurasia,
Proceedings of the July 2002 International Symposium at the SRC
(Sapporo: SRC, 2003), 365 pp. In English.
Contents: Foreword;
V. Buldakov,
Attempts at the "Nationalization" of Russian and Soviet History in the
Newly Independent Slavic States;
A.
Kappeler, The Russian Empire and Its Nationalities in
Post-Soviet Historiographies;
V. Shnirelman, Fostered
Primordialism: The Identity and Ancestry of the North Caucasian Turks
in the Soviet and Post-Soviet Milieu;
H.
Abramson, The End of Intimate Insularity: New Narratives of
Jewish History in the Post-Soviet Era;
Nagayo S., The Paradox
of Slovak Historiography: The Case of the Slovak State, 1939-1945;
T. Glanc, Method, Message and
Manipulation: Remarks on the
Writing of History: Some Examples of the Reception - and Non-reception
- of Narrativity in Contemporary Russian and Czech Historiography;
M. Bartlovб, The
Search for Deep Roots: Medieval Art in the Historiographies of the
Central European Nations;
Kaizawa H., The Formation of
the Concept of "National Literature" in Russia and the Works of
Aleksandr Pypin;
P. Karagyozov, Slavic
Nationalism: An Overview;
M. Dolbilov, The Emancipation
Reform of 1861 in Russia and the Nationalism of the Imperial
Bureaucracy;
Uyama T., A Strategic Alliance
between Kazakh Intellectuals and Russian Administrators: Imagined
Communities in
Dala Walayatїnїng
Gazetн (1888-1902);
A.
Frank, Islamic Transformation on the Kazakh Steppe, 1742-1917:
Toward an Islamic History of Kazakhstan under Russian Rule;
Kitagawa S., The
Nationalization of the Islamic
Organization in the South Caucasus: The Role of Islam in Making
Azerbaijan's National Identity;
Shinohara T., Communal
Autonomy as a Base of Civil
Society: Local Autonomy and the Building of National Culture in Bohemia
in the 19th Century;
V. Paounovsky, The Bulgarian
Policy on the Balkan
Countries and National Minorities, 1878-1912