The Kirghiz and Wakhi of Afghanistan

The Kirghiz and Wakhi of Afghanistan
Adaptation to Closed Frontiers and War
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Artikel-Nr:
9780295982625
Veröffentl:
2002
Erscheinungsdatum:
01.11.2002
Seiten:
304
Autor:
M Nazif Shahrani
Gewicht:
476 g
Format:
228x155x20 mm
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

M. Nazif Shahrani , an Afghan anthropologist, is chair of the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures at Indiana University.
An extended new Preface and a new Epilogue written after the fall of the Taliban in 2001, place The Kirghiz and Wakhi of Afghanistan, originally published in 1979, in the context of a vastly changed world. The original book describes the cultural and ecological adaptation of the nomadic Kirghiz and their agriculturalist neighbors, the Wakhi, to high altitudes and a frigid climate in the Wakhan Corridor, a panhandle of Afghanistan that borders Pakistan, the former Soviet Union, and the People's Republic of China.The new Preface challenges the assumption that the root cause of terrorism is religious. Shahrani asserts that the problem of terrorism is fundamentally political and is historically linked to the inappropriate model of the centralized nation-state introduced to Afghanistan by colonial regimes.The differing responses of the Kirghiz and Wakhi to the Marxist coup are discussed in the new Epilogue. Shahrani has closely followed the flight of the Kirghiz to Pakistan in 1978 and their eventual resettlement among resentful Kurdish villagers in eastern Turkey in 1982. The ethnographic documentation and analysis of the transformation of Kirghiz society, politics, economics, and demography since their exodus from the Pamirs offers valuable lessons to our understanding of the dynamics and true resilience of small pastoral nomadic communities.
AcknowledgmentsPreface to the 2002 Edition: Afghanistan, the Taliban, and Global Terror, Inc.Preface to the Original EditionIntroductionPart One | Space, Time, and Human Communities1. The Ecological Setting2. History and Demographic ProcessPart Two | Strategies of Adaptation3. The Wakhi High-Altitude Agropastoral Adaptation4. The Kirghiz Pastoral Subsistence System5. The Kirghiz People, the Oey, and the QorowPart Three | Closed Frontier6. Territorial Loss: an Intracultural Adaptation7. Adaptation to Socioeconomic and Cultural RestrictionsConclusionEpilogue: Coping with a Communist "Revolution," State Failure, and WarGlossaryBibliographyIndex

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