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Abstract

In 1991 republics of Soviet Central Asia were reluctantly ‘launched’ into independence.
The central puzzle of this dissertation is: “How has sovereign statehood been ‘constructed’ in the post-independence period in the absence of history of anti-colonial struggle?” This is an analysis of state sovereignty as a practice that is performative and interactive through the examination of ‘discursive encounters’ between Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Such analysis traces temporal and spatial dimensions of dialogical sovereign identity construction.

In post-Soviet Tajikistan and Uzbekistan sovereignties have been performed in a dialogue, through dynamic interactions with one another. The work of asserting state sovereignty is performed by various actors who claim to impersonate the state and speak on its behalf. Multiple narratives of the self are articulated in relation to the relevant “interlocutor”, whose reactions and counter-articulations are “fed back” into the narrative of the self. The right to existence of these states as agents of international relations is justified through such ‘discursive encounters’ that simulate sovereignty. I propose the Möbius strip as a conceptual model for understanding the process of sovereignty-assertion.

Competing historiographies present two irreconcilable narratives: history of an ethnic group and history of the territory of the current state. These are consistent with the nature of nationalisms in each state. While Tajik nationalists long for ‘historical Tajikistan’, Uzbek nationalism is inherently conservative and defensive of territorial sovereignty.

The controversy surrounding the Roghun HPP is an example of the daily construction
and maintenance a state. Competing principles of water sharing contributed to an
ongoing crisis in Tajik-Uzbek relations. Sovereignty is simulated within the periods and
zones of ‘exception’ via a Möbian mechanism of dialogical meaning-making, whereby
each side strives to exploit the inherent ambiguity of signifiers in order to advance their
own narrative of the self and other.

Mughal Library
BECOMING SOVEREIGN IN POST-SOVIET CENTRAL ASIA: 'DISCURSIVE ENCOUNTERS' BETWEEN TAJIKISTAN AND UZBEKISTAN

BECOMING SOVEREIGN IN POST-SOVIET CENTRAL ASIA: 'DISCURSIVE ENCOUNTERS' BETWEEN TAJIKISTAN AND UZBEKISTAN

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Contributed

Mirza Firuz Shah

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Book Review

Subject:

Political Science

Subclass:

Political science (General)

Reign:

Akbar III 1948-2012

Subject Year (Time):

2011

Author:

Mohira Suyarkulova

Languages:

English

Royal Mughal Ref:

ARC-18122021-001

Date of Creation:

December 15, 2011

BECOMING SOVEREIGN IN POST-SOVIET CENTRAL ASIA: 'DISCURSIVE ENCOUNTERS' BETWEEN TAJIKISTAN AND UZBEKISTAN
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Description

Abstract

In 1991 republics of Soviet Central Asia were reluctantly ‘launched’ into independence.
The central puzzle of this dissertation is: “How has sovereign statehood been ‘constructed’ in the post-independence period in the absence of history of anti-colonial struggle?” This is an analysis of state sovereignty as a practice that is performative and interactive through the examination of ‘discursive encounters’ between Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Such analysis traces temporal and spatial dimensions of dialogical sovereign identity construction.

In post-Soviet Tajikistan and Uzbekistan sovereignties have been performed in a dialogue, through dynamic interactions with one another. The work of asserting state sovereignty is performed by various actors who claim to impersonate the state and speak on its behalf. Multiple narratives of the self are articulated in relation to the relevant “interlocutor”, whose reactions and counter-articulations are “fed back” into the narrative of the self. The right to existence of these states as agents of international relations is justified through such ‘discursive encounters’ that simulate sovereignty. I propose the Möbius strip as a conceptual model for understanding the process of sovereignty-assertion.

Competing historiographies present two irreconcilable narratives: history of an ethnic group and history of the territory of the current state. These are consistent with the nature of nationalisms in each state. While Tajik nationalists long for ‘historical Tajikistan’, Uzbek nationalism is inherently conservative and defensive of territorial sovereignty.

The controversy surrounding the Roghun HPP is an example of the daily construction
and maintenance a state. Competing principles of water sharing contributed to an
ongoing crisis in Tajik-Uzbek relations. Sovereignty is simulated within the periods and
zones of ‘exception’ via a Möbian mechanism of dialogical meaning-making, whereby
each side strives to exploit the inherent ambiguity of signifiers in order to advance their
own narrative of the self and other.

Mughal Library

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sara s

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how to buy a book or pdf ?
i want to read this type of history books.pls reply me

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