Book review: Asia Overland by Bijan Omrani

Bijan Omrani’s travel companion offering, Asia Overland, is the sort of book I would have craved on my travels of the Silk Road. Make no mistake, despite its small section covering the dos and don’ts of travelling the region, this is not a guide book. It will not list the best places to stay or the best places to eat, nor will it tell you how to get there, or, more importantly, get away. However, it is, perhaps, one of best books to come out recently that enables the adventurous traveller to place their surroundings into a sound historical context. Couple this with some exquisite photographs of the region’s monuments, landscapes and people and the Odyssey published book brings the region alive in much more detail than any guide book can ever achieve. Continue reading

Azerbaijan: Looking Beyond Energy

For centuries, Azerbaijan acted as a natural crossroads for the ancient Silk Road between Europe and Asia and a home to the world’s diverse cultures, religions and peoples. It has also been endowed with abundant natural resources, of which oil has become the most acknowledged and remembered.

Before the Common Era, inhabitants of present-day Azerbaijan used oil for heating and lighting purposes and as a remedy to cure burns and various skin diseases. While travelling via the Silk Road in the thirteenth century, the famous Venetian merchant and traveler, Marco Polo, used to describe Baku’s oil as one of the most sought commodities in the region. It was not until the late nineteenth century, however, that Azerbaijan’s oil would become known internationally. By the 1870s, the Nobel Brothers and the Rothschild Family were operating several oil wells in Baku and the region’s oil started to be exported abroad. At the beginning of the twentieth century, Azerbaijan was supplying more than 50 percent of the world’s oil. Continue reading

Charles Weller: Post-Soviet Kazakh and Kyrgyz Interpretations of History, Yale U.

Post-Soviet Kazakh and Kyrgyz Interpretations of Turkic Central Asian
and World Religious-Cultural History

Fresh interpretations of Turkic Central Asian as well as broader world religious-cultural history and identity have quite naturally emerged among Kazakh and Kyrgyz scholars in the post-Soviet and now post-911 era. In examining these interpretations, Dr. Weller highlights, via his own careful English translations of the Kazakh language sources, the internal struggle between resurgent Muslim and Tengrist (i.e., “Native Turkic Religious”) positions developing in dynamic interface with lingering atheistic communist and rising Western secular as well as Christian influence among the Turkic Central Asian peoples, making comparative reference to key works from the late Tsarist and Soviet periods along the way. Continue reading

Permanent International Altaistic Conference

54th Annual Meeting of the PIAC

Department of Central Asian Studies and Sinor Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies, Indiana University together with The Mongolia Society Bloomington, Indiana USA July 10-15, 2011

It is our great pleasure to invite you to attend the 54th annual meeting of the PIAC to be held in Bloomington, Indiana, United States, and organized by the Department of Central Asian Studies and Sinor Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies together with The Mongolia Society in celebration of its 50th anniversary. Continue reading

Tolerance as a Factor of Ethnic and Religion Interaction, Kazan, Nov. 16-18

The year 2010 was claimed The Year of Convergence of Cultures by UNESCO. We invite you to resume The Year of Convergence of Cultures and Tolerance in Russia at the International Research and Practice Conference which will be held at 16-18th of November 2010 in Kazan. The aim of the Conference is the theoretical understanding of the tendencies of development and the meaning of tolerance in ethnic and religion interaction in the situations of mutual influence and mutual penetration of cultures of Russia in the process of globalization and, particularly, on the example of the Republic of Tatarstan. We are expecting to meet the exchange of positive foreign and Russian experience and of the most effective ideas in formation the issues of tolerance in legal and law enforcement spheres, in education, mass media, culture, sport, and tourism. During the Conference will be worked out recommendation related to reconciliation of conflict demonstrations of intolerance. Continue reading