Studying Islam in the Soviet Union
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| Publication date | 2009 |
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| Series | Inaugural lecture, 321 |
| Number of pages | 26 |
| Publisher | Amsterdam: Vossiuspers UvA |
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| Abstract |
Our image of Islam in the Soviet Union has changed a lot in the last three decades. During the Cold War period, Western observers were mainly driven by the question whether Islam - and above all the Sufi brotherhoods with their male disciples - could become a political and military threat to Moscow's rule in Central Asia and the Caucasus. Russian scholars, by contrast, regarded Sufi sm as a threat because the Sufi shrines attracted a mainly female audience; these women would transmit the 'superstitions' of Islam to their children and contribute to the dominance of Muslim traditionalism - a kind of Soviet subculture that seemed to be resistant against atheist education. As shown in the lecture, Western and Soviet researchers made the same methodological mistakes; and today we often repeat these mistakes when stereotyping Islamic 'fundamentalism'.
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| Document type | Inaugural speech |
| Note | Inaugural lecture delivered on the appointment to the chair of Eastern European Studies at the University of Amsterdam on Thursday 11 December 2008 11-12-2008 |
| Language | English |
| Downloads |
PDF-8952oratie_Kemper.pdf
(Final published version)
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