Preview

Philology and Culture

Advanced search

Central Asia in Russian descriptions of the 18th century: On an anonymous note from the non-church calendar of the Enlightenment Era

https://doi.org/10.26907/2782-4756-2024-76-2-92-101

Abstract

There is a lot of interest in travelogue in the research environment today. Russian oriental travelogues, associated with the Central Asian region, have not been studied sufficiently before, besides a certain number of substantive works primarily of a historiographical nature. A special body of problems here is related to the origins of the Russian Central Asian travelogue formation as a genre structure. One of the texts, related to the “origins of the genre” and taken for consideration in this article, is a note by an anonymous author-compiler entitled “News of Bukharia”, published in the “Monthly Historical and Geographical Dictionary for 1779” (St. Petersburg Imperial Academy of Sciences). The article is a kind of commentary on this note. We characterize the journal in which it was presented – the printed secular calendar of the 18th century, it differs from the religious ones. The article determines historical, cultural, landscape and geographical realities, reflected in it, and identifies the ideological position of the compiler in the context of the eastern imperial policy of those years. We cautiously assume that when writing the text, the author could use materials on Central Asia from Western sources. There is no literary element as such in the described note. This is not a travelogue in the exact meaning of the term, but a concise informative essay on a regional topic, in which, however, there is no strategy for an objective scientific narrative (“pure curiosity”). We can clearly see the journalistic (state) ideologems of its era, combining the economic aspirations of Russia and its geopolitical attitudes (it is significant that in the note the reader he does not even find any ethnographic images of Central Asian people, their portraits, morals and everyday habits). At the same time, the text of the “News of Bukharia” includes separate general literary components– strict composition, laconism of speech style and logical sequence. The text is important as an early stage in the formation of a scientific and artistic Central Asia modus, as a phenomenon of “documentary literature”, not “fictional literature”.

About the Authors

R. Bekmetov
Kazan Federal University
Russian Federation

Bekmetov Rinat Ferganovich, Doctor of Philology, Professor, Head of Leo Tolstoy’s Heritage Studies Center

18 Kremlyovskaya Str., Kazan, 420008



N. Sabirov
Ferghana State University
Uzbekistan

Sabirov Nemat Kazakbayevich, Assistant Professor in the Russian Philology Department

19 Murabbillar Str., Ferghana, 420008



References

1. Goncharov, I. A. (1997). Polnoye sobranie sochinenii: v 4 tomakh [Complete Collection of Works: In 20 Volumes]. Vol. II: Fragat “Pallada”: ocherki puteshestviya v dvukh tomakh. 746 p. St. Petersburg, Nauka. (In Russian)

2. Literaturnaya entsiklopediya terminov i pon'atii (2001) [Literary Encyclopedia of Terms and Concepts]. Pod red. A. N. Nikol'ukina. 1600 stb. Мoscow, NPK “Intelvak”. (In Russian)

3. Chekhov, A. P. (1978). Polnoe sobranie sochinenii i pisem: v 30 tomakh [Complete Collection of Works and Letters: In 30 Volumes]. Vol. XIV/XV: Iz Sibiri. Ostrov Sakhalin. 452 p. Мoscow, Nauka. (In Russian)

4. Avchenko, V. О. (2021). Literaturnye pervoprokhodtsy Dal'nego Vostoka [Literary Pioneers of the Far East]. 255 p. Мoscow, Molodaya gvardiya. (In Russian)

5. Ponomorev, Е. (2017). Russkii imperskii travelog [Russian Imperial Travelogue]. Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie. No. 2 (144), pp. 33–44. (In Russian)

6. Russian Central Asia, including Kuldja, Bokhara, Khiva and Merv by Henry Landsell (author of “Through Siberia”) in two volumes. (1885). Vol. 2. 732 p. London, Sampson Low, Marston, Searle, and Rivington 188, Fleet Street. (In English)

7. Tikhomirov, М. N. (1960). Prisoedinenie Merva k Rosii [The Accession of Merv to Russia]. 239 p. Мoscow, izd-vo vostochnoi literatury. (In Russian)

8. Izvestiya о Bukharii (1779) [News about Bukhara]. Mesya'tseslov istoricheskii i geograficheskii za 1779 god. Pp. 113–126. St. Petersburg. (In Russian)

9. Loseva, О. V. (2001). Russkie mes'yatseslovy XI–XIV vekov [Russian Moneths of the 11th – 14th Centuries]. 421 p. Мoscow, Pam'yatniki istoricheskoi mysli. (In Russian)

10. Madzhidov, O. Sh. (2021). Kuda vpadala reka Amudar'ya: paleogeograficheskoe issledovanie [Where the Amudarya River Flowed: A Paleogeographical Study]. Tsentral'noazatskii zhurnal geograficheskikh issledovanii. No. 3–4, рр. 45–54. (In Russian)

11. Burshtein, Е. F. (2012). “Pesoshnoe zoloto” v Rossii: puteshestvie Matveya Snegireva v 1790 godu [“Golden Sand” in Russia: The Journey of Matvey Snegirev in 1790]. Priroda. No. 6, pp. 67–73. (In Russian)

12. Izbasarova, G. (2017). Amanat v traditsionnom kazakhskom obschestve i rossiiskoi politike XVIII v. [Amanat in the Traditional Kazakh Society and Russian Politics of the 18 th Century]. Rossiiskaya istoriya. No 1, pp. 103–112. (In Russian)

13. Bekmetov, R. F. (2016). Tibet v russkoi literature [Tibet in Russian Literature]. Filologiya i kul'tura. No. 2 (44), pp. 189–194. (In Russian)


Review

For citations:


Bekmetov R., Sabirov N. Central Asia in Russian descriptions of the 18th century: On an anonymous note from the non-church calendar of the Enlightenment Era. Philology and Culture. 2024;(2):92-101. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.26907/2782-4756-2024-76-2-92-101

Views: 154


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2782-4756 (Print)