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February 16, 2004
In this issue
News
That rainy-day feeling: Raingardens
offer new approach
to stormwater management
Symposium focuses on human rights and globalization in Africa
Senior administration meets with university community
Student Learning Center dedication takes place Feb. 19
Popular ‘Vanishing Georgia’ photos now accessible electronically
University Council approves creation of interdisciplinary Cancer Center
Fruit of their labor: Scientists have discovered that papaya sex chromosomes have virtually all of the features of human sex chromosomes
Ready to judge
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Go Figure
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Update: Private Giving
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weekly reader

 
book cover for Veiled Empire
Veiled Empire: Gender and Power in Stalinist Central Asia
By Douglas Northrop
$57.50 (cloth)
$29.95 (paper)
Cornell University Press

Prof details Soviet ‘unveiling’ campaign

Veiled Empire reconstructs the turbulent history of a Soviet campaign that sought to end the seclusion of Muslim women.

Written by Douglas Northrop, UGA assistant professor of history, the book draws on research in the archives of Russia and Uzbekistan. This campaign against the veil was, in Northrop’s view, emblematic of the larger Soviet attempt to bring the proletarian revolution to Muslim Central Asia, a region Soviets saw as primitive and backward.

This unveiling campaign, however, took place in the context of a half-century of Russian colonization and the long-standing suspicion of rural Muslim peasants toward an urban, colonial state.

Over the next quarter-century a bitter and often violent confrontation ensued, with battles being waged over practices of veiling and seclusion. Northrop’s book shows the fluidity of Central Asian cultural practices and the real limits that existed on Stalinist authority, even during the ostensibly totalitarian 1930s.

 


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