Introduction
1. Intelligentsia and Reform in Tsarist Central Asia
2. The Moment of Opportunity
3. Nationalizing the Revolution
4. The Muslim Republic of Bukhara
5. The Long Road to Soviet Power
6. A Revolution of the Mind
7. Islam between Reform and Revolution
8. The Making of Uzbekistan
9. Tajik as a Residual Category
10. The Ideological Front
11. The Assault
12. Toward a Soviet Order
Epilogue
Glossary
Bibliography of Primary Sources
Index
Adeeb Khalid is Jane and Raphael Bernstein Professor of Asian Studies and History at Carleton College. He is the author of Islam after Communism and The Politics of Muslim Cultural Reform.
[T]his brilliant book demonstrates that modern Uzbekistan was
unequivocally made by Uzbek intellectuals in Central Asia, and not
by Bolshevik commissars in Moscow. Adeeb Khalid has offered
invaluable evidence to argue that Central Asia's political fate
remains equally in the hands of local leaders, and is not
determined by obscure outside forces. It is in this sense that
Making Uzbekistan will make a lasting contribution to Central Asian
Studies.
*Europe-Asia Studies*
Khalid successfully compiles an impressive and outstanding account
of the unfolding events in the making of Uzbekistan in the
tumultuous epoch of the Russian Revolution as a result of his
encyclopedic comprehension of the sociohistorical considerations of
the period and his unique linguistic capabilities.
*Acta Via Serica*
Adeeb Khalid's Making Uzbekistan is a careful reconstruction of
Muslim reformist thought in Turkestan, which advances considerably
our understanding of the reasons why sections of the local
intelligentsia participated actively in the Soviet
construction.
*American Historical Review*
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