Armenia, Caucasus and Central Asia
Research 2021
edited by
abstract
Consistently with a consolidated tradition within the series «Eurasiatica», the volume aims to intercept and represent the main research trends in the academic debate about the region across the Caucasus and Central Asia unfolding in the Italian academic environment and involving both national and international scholars. In this perspective, the volume presents a series of essays that draw inspiration from papers presented in the context of the main annual conferences and conventions focused on Caucasian and Central Asian studies. Accordingly, the volume hosts contributions shaped by different disciplinary matrices, ranging from historical and philological to linguistic, literary and political studies.
Maqom • Dagestan • Scholarisation • Anthropology • Bāburnāme • Āmānnisā Khān Nāfisi (1526-1560) • Metalwork • Transcaucasia • Maqām • Correspondence • Phonetics • Uyghur Dervishes • Publication • Caucasus • Modernity and Modernisation • Multi-vectorism • Chechnya • Nationalism • Landscape archaeology • Shirvan • Foreign Policy • Travel Diarist • Turcology • Trauma and Memory Studies • Women’s Rights Discourse • Karabagh • Postcolonial Studies • Diverse Cultures • Jabal al-alsun ‘mountain of tongues’ • On Ikki Muqam • Militarization • Kosta Khetagurov • Afāq Khwaja • Caucasian languages • Levier • Food studies • Muqam • Discourse Analysis • Graphics • Translations • Tang Court Ethnic Ensembles • Collective Memory • Khāfi • Chaghatay language • Geopolitical Codes • Bronze Age • Linguistic diversity • Engravings • German Sadulaev • Russophone Literature • Historiography • Uyghur Art Music • Ossetic • Expedition • Nader Shah • Sommier • Highlands • Post-Soviet Literature • Dodoj • Ṙet‘ēos Pērpērean • Kazakhstan‑China Relations • Mashrab • Iron fændyr • Central Asia • Photos • Naqshbandī tariqa • Jabal al-alsun ‘mountain of tongues’ • Botany • Constitutional Reforms in the Ottoman Empire • Areal-typological studies • Jahri • Azerbaijan • Travelogue • Armenian Millet • Arab-Muslim geographers • Uyghur Music Instruments • Iron Age