Was the prehistoric man an Azeri nationalist?: Mobilized prehistory and nation-building in Azerbaijan

IF 1.1 3区 社会学 Q2 AREA STUDIES Central Asian Survey Pub Date : 2023-09-25 DOI:10.1080/02634937.2023.2256796
Uri Rosenberg
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Abstract

Gobustan, a prehistoric site 60 km south of Baku, has an impressive collection of rock carvings from different prehistoric eras. Near the site, a national museum presents the prehistoric findings in a narrative that connects them with modern-day Azerbaijan, calling the hunter–gatherer tribes that lived in Gobustan ‘our ancient Azerbaijani ancestors’. While many nation-building projects dig deep into the past, reconstruct it, claim ancient civilizations as their own and sometimes even invent historical narratives that never happened, the Gobustan Museum and the narrative it implies (that prehistoric people living in 15,000 BCE were Azerbaijanis) seems like ‘overkill’, an exaggerated effort to connect the past and the present. The data from the museum points to a larger story: the construction of national identity and collective memory in post-Soviet Azerbaijan. This paper presents some of the author’s anthropological field research findings in the museum and explains why the narrative of ‘ancientness’ is so essential in post-Soviet Azerbaijan.
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这个史前人是阿塞拜疆民族主义者吗?动员了阿塞拜疆的史前史和国家建设
戈布斯坦是位于巴库以南60公里处的一个史前遗址,拥有令人印象深刻的不同史前时期的岩石雕刻。在遗址附近,一座国家博物馆展示了这些史前发现,将它们与现代阿塞拜疆联系起来,称生活在戈布斯坦的狩猎采集部落是“我们古老的阿塞拜疆祖先”。虽然许多国家建设计画深入挖掘历史、重建历史,宣称古代文明属于自己,有时甚至捏造从未发生过的历史叙述,但戈布斯坦博物馆及其所暗示的叙述(生活在公元前15,000年的史前人是阿塞拜疆人)似乎有些“矫枉过正”,夸张地将过去与现在联系起来。博物馆的数据指向了一个更大的故事:后苏联时代阿塞拜疆的民族认同和集体记忆的构建。本文介绍了作者在博物馆的一些人类学实地研究成果,并解释了为什么“古老”的叙述在后苏联阿塞拜疆如此重要。
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来源期刊
Central Asian Survey
Central Asian Survey AREA STUDIES-
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
33.30%
发文量
45
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