Introduction
Chapter One: In a Tangle of Old Problems: First Steps of New
Leaders of Azerbaijan
Chapter Two: The 20th Congress of the CPSU and Soviet Republics of
the South Caucasus
Chapter Three: Enactment of the Law on State Language of
Azerbaijan
Chapter Four: Deeping of Political Crisis in the Leadership of
Azerbaijan
Chapter Five: The Year 1957: Aggravation of Contradictions in the
Soviet Leadership and Azerbaijan
Chapter Six: Transformation of National Policy into a Key Factor of
Society’s Development
Chapter Seven: Attempts of Party Bodies to Strengthen Control in
Ideology
Chapter Eight: Summer 1959: Moscow’s Interference and Change of
Leadership in Azerbaijan
Conclusion
Jamil Hasanli is a former professor of history at Baku State University and Khazar University.
As its title suggests, Jamil Hasanli’s latest work will most likely
appeal to two broad constituencies: those interested in the
Khrushchev era of Soviet history and those with a focus on
Azerbaijan or the wider Caucasus region. This book surely has more
to offer to the latter of these two groups, though there should
also be plenty to interest the former, too. This is clearly a book
based upon meticulous research in the largely-untapped archives of
Azerbaijan, and one which duly offers a number of interesting
contributions to the emerging picture of the period in question….
With such a dearth of high quality scholarly literature on the
history of Soviet Azerbaijan available in the English language—and
most of that which does exist has been written by Hasanli—this is a
particularly welcome addition to the field.
*Europe-Asia Studies*
Jamil Hasanli is, by a clear distance, Azerbaijan’s most
distinguished historian. Yet again, his archival work and command
of sources have delivered a fascinating and original text, this
time a book covering a blank spot in the historiography of
Azerbaijan: the period of the Khrushchev thaw. This book will be
essential reading for anyone interested in the twentieth-century
history of the Caucasus.
*Thomas de Waal, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace*
In Khrushchev's Thaw and National Identity in Soviet Azerbaijan,
1954-1959, Azerbaijan's leading historian Jamil Hasanli provides a
fascinating account of history unfolding at a time and in a place
where history was thought to be frozen. Hasanli’s path-breaking
work uncovers the undercurrents of politics after Stalin in a
Soviet borderland, and will be of immense interest to students of
Soviet history, the Caucasus, and socialism and nationalism more
broadly.
*Michael A. Reynolds, Princeton University*
Jamil Hasanli's new book sheds light on a little-researched but
pivotal period of Azerbaijani history, the 1950s, when political
life and national consciousness were reawakened after the death of
Stalin. Dr. Hasanli illustrates this reawakening by examining
internal communist party debates over appointments and policies
concerning Stalin's purge victims and survivors in literature and
other arts. The book tells a fascinating story of national
resilience, individual stories of personal integrity, survival,
betrayal, and loss, and the struggle over policies. Hasanli places
Azerbaijan in Soviet policy context and provides a powerful
counter-example to the popular "nation building" thesis among
scholars of Soviet nationalities policies.
*Audrey Altstadt, University of Massachusetts Amherst*
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