Book Cover

Strangers in a Strange Land: Occidentalist Publics and Orientalist Geographies in Nineteenth-Century Georgian Imaginaries

Contributor(s): Manning, Paul (Author)

ISBN: 9781618118318

Publisher: Academic Studies Press

Binding Types:

$45.00
$57.95 (Final Price)
$56.75 (100+ copies: $56.00)
List/retail price:
$45.00
- +
Buy

Pub Date: May 30, 2018

Dewey: 947.5807

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.72" H x 9.21" L x 6.14" W ( 1.07 lbs) 345 pages

Series: Cultural Revolutions: Russia in the Twentieth Century

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: Manning examines the formation of nineteenth-century intelligentsia print publics in the former Soviet republic of Georgia both anthropologically and historically. At once somehow part of "Europe," at least aspirationally, and yet rarely recognized by others as such, Georgia attempted to forge European style publics as a strong claim to European identity. These attempts also produced a crisis of self-defi nition, as European Georgia sent newspaper correspondents into newly reconquered Oriental Georgia, only to discover that the people of these lands were strangers. In this encounter, the community of "strangers" of European Georgian publics proved unable to assimilate the people of the "strange land" of Oriental Georgia. This crisis produced both notions of Georgian public life and European identity which this book explores.

Review Quotes: "This is a sophisticated exploration of the complex and often contradictory elements of nation-building and identity-formation in Georgia in the second half of the nineteenth century. Manning, has an extraordinary understanding of the subtleties of Georgian writing. Drawing on Gerogian newspapers, poetry, and short stories, and focusing on Georgia's encounters with Europe, Russia, and the Ottoman Empire, he weaves together a complex challenge to the familiar Western tropes of the imagined community. Manning has produced a novel theoretical contribution to our ideas about the role of intellectuals in national identity formation."

Worth Considering
Product successfully added to cart!