Voices from the Soviet Edge: Southern Migrants in Leningrad and Moscow

Voices from the Soviet Edge: Southern Migrants in Leningrad and Moscow

by Jeff Sahadeo
Voices from the Soviet Edge: Southern Migrants in Leningrad and Moscow

Voices from the Soviet Edge: Southern Migrants in Leningrad and Moscow

by Jeff Sahadeo

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Overview

Jeff Sahadeo reveals the complex and fascinating stories of migrant populations in Leningrad and Moscow. Voices from the Soviet Edge focuses on the hundreds of thousands of Uzbeks, Tajiks, Georgians, Azerbaijanis, and others who arrived toward the end of the Soviet era, seeking opportunity at the privileged heart of the USSR. Through the extensive oral histories Sahadeo has collected, he shows how the energy of these migrants, denigrated as "Blacks" by some Russians, transformed their families' lives and created inter-republican networks, altering society and community in both the center and the periphery of life in the "two capitals."

Voices from the Soviet Edge connects Leningrad and Moscow to transnational trends of core-periphery movement and marks them as global cities. In examining Soviet concepts such as "friendship of peoples" alongside ethnic and national differences, Sahadeo shows how those ideas became racialized but could also be deployed to advance migrant aspirations. He exposes the Brezhnev era as a time of dynamism and opportunity, and Leningrad and Moscow not as isolated outposts of privilege but at the heart of any number of systems that linked the disparate regions of the USSR into a whole. In the 1980s, as the Soviet Union crumbled, migration increased. These later migrants were the forbears of contemporary Muslims from former Soviet spaces who now confront significant discrimination in European Russia. As Sahadeo demonstrates, the two cities benefited from 1980s' migration but also became communities where racism and exclusion coexisted with citizenship and Soviet identity.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501738227
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 06/15/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
File size: 4 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Jeff Sahadeo is Associate Professor at the Institute of European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies at Carleton University. He is author of Russian Colonial Society in Tashkent, 1865–1923 and co-editor of Everyday Life in Central Asia.

What People are Saying About This

Bruce Grant

Race, little attended in Soviet Studies, returns in this rich body of stories, offering a finely tuned study of economic aspiration, political history, the lure of the city, broad social networks, and the shuttling of millions of men and women across a USSR that was once home to so many.

Anne Gorsuch

Voices from the Soviet Edge is an excellent book by an acknowledged expert on internal migration to Moscow and Leningrad. The use of oral interviews, with archival and published materials, makes Jeff Sahadeo's book a welcome example of how to do historical work on the late Soviet period.

Adeeb Khalid

In this story of people on the move, Jeff Sahadeo puts people from the Soviet peripheries center stage and reveals the multinational Soviet Union in completely new light. He highlights the significance of the Soviet experience for discussions of postcolonialism, migration, and race relations.

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