Кавказология (Mar 2020)

HISTORICAL POLITICS IN THE NATIONAL REPUBLICS OF THE CAUCASUS: COMMEMORATIVE PRACTICES AS INVENTED TRADITIONS

  • M. W. KYRCHANOFF

DOI
https://doi.org/10.31143/2542-212x-2020-1-219-236
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 0, no. 1
pp. 219 – 236

Abstract

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The author analyzes the features of historical politics as a politics of memory in four national republics of the Caucasus – Chechnya, North and South Ossetia, Abkhazia. It is assumed that the modern politics of memory became a continuation of nationalist manipulations with the history of the previous period because historians played an important role in the development of modern national identities. An analysis of the politics of memory can be carried out on the basis of national historical narratives. Its study in the context of the functioning of invented traditions (Republic Day, Independence Day, Flag Day) actualize social forms and changes in historical memory. It is shown that the historical politics in Chechnya, Abkhazia, North and South Ossetia develop as a policy of promotion of state narratives, state continuity and the inevitability of the emergence of national statehood. The author concludes that ethnic motives in modern politics of memory are marginalized in comparison with other ones and their importance decreased from the 1990s. Ethnic motives are more visible in the Abkhaz and Chechen politics of memory, while Ossetian historical politics emphasizes the idea of statehood. In general, the author believes that the politics of memory in the national republics of the Caucasus have a secondary nature because they duplicate the practices and strategies of historical imagination proposed in the historical policies of Europe in general and Russia in particular.

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