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The Use and Abuse of Postcolonial Discourses in Post-independent Kazakhstan

Diana T. Kudaibergenova

Europe-Asia Studies, 2016, vol. 68, issue 5, 917-935

Abstract: The article explores the concept of political postcolonialism and how political groups appropriate and contest this discourse. Elites and contesting political groups utilise postcolonial rhetoric to legitimate their political goals by projecting that their country, in this case Kazakhstan, was colonised by the Tsarist Russia and then by the Soviet Union. For President Nursultan A. Nazarbayev’s nationalising regime the status of Kazakhstan as a colony represented a vital item in post-1991 nation-building projects. Political opposition and Kazakh national-patriots contested this official discourse, blaming the regime for scarce efforts towards ‘full decolonisation’. The absence of major intellectual discussion allowed these elites and political players to reappropriate these discourses in the political rather than critical intellectual domain.

Date: 2016
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DOI: 10.1080/09668136.2016.1194967

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