Modern History of the Caucasus
Section outline
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Modern History of the Caucasus
(JTB 241)
Associate Professor Adrian Brisku, PhD
Doctoral Student, Lamiya Panahova
Department of Russian & East European Studies, Charles University
https://cuni.academia.edu/adrianBrisku
adrian.brisku@fsv.cuni.cz; lamiya.panahova@fsv.cuni.cz
Annotation
Particularly since the ‘long nineteenth century’, the peoples, nationalities, and nations in the Caucasus region – comprised of the North Caucasus, small republics at the southern border of the Russian Federation and of the South Caucasus, the nation-states of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia adjacent to it – have had a shared history in terms of tsarist and Soviet Russian occupation, control and co-option, interethnic conflict and cooperation as well as social (under)development. Starting with a conceptual discussion of the region, its linguistic, ethnic, and cultural diversity as well as its pre-Tsarist political history, this course traces the political, economic, and cultural processes in the North and South Caucasus has undergone in the tsarist, Soviet and post-Soviet periods, underscoring factors, discourses and legacies that have shaped its past, still impact its present and potentially orient its future.
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