Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
The Ambiguities of The Kazakhs' Nomadic Heritage
- Journal:
- Nomadic Peoples
- Year:
- 2016
- Authors:
- Ferret, Carole
- Affiliation:
- Ethnologist, is a researcher at the CNRS and Deputy Director of the Laboratory of Social Anthropology in Paris. She has carried out extensive field work since 1994 among the Turkic peoples of Siberia and Central Asia, and was awarded a Ph.D. on horse breeding and training in that region. As she advocates an anthropology of action, her research compares the treatment of nature with the treatment of others in Inner Asia, especially among the Yakuts of Eastern Siberia and the Kazakhs in Central Asia.... · France
- Species:
- horse
Abstract
Abstract 1 Presenting themselves as the heirs of the steppe nomads, the Kazakhs have, since the independence of Kazakhstan in 1991, emphasised their nomadic inheritance as the basis of their identity. Nonetheless, for all that they reclaim this heritage, they remain influenced by negative representations of nomads, and, having difficulty in combining pastoralism and modernity, they proclaim themselves at the same time founders of cities, inventors of writing and creators of state, in a quest for ancestral grounding which they share with other Central Asian republics. In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, debates upon sedentarisation showed all the ambivalence of the Russian and Kazakh positions on the topic. Following independence, the 'patrimonialisation' of nomadism focused upon some ancillary emblems, such as the yurt or the horse, neglecting the essential feature, residential mobility, and, in ignoring actual nomadic practices, it definitively relegated nomadism to the past. Ethnography, conceived as a historical discipline consistently built on an evolutionist paradigm, described Kazakh pastoralism as relevant to a temporal elsewhere (before the 1917 revolution) or a geographical one (beyond the borders of Kazakhstan), and it showed little interest in the actual realities of mobile pastoralism, despite it being practiced by a small part of the population.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://doi.org/10.3197/np.2016.200202