162preface1 Aleksandr Kondrashov, “S kem voiuiut nashi soldaty?” Argumenty i
Fakty5, no. 1006 (February 2000): 5.
2 Nino Chekhoshvili, “Zdes’ khoteli zhit’,” Kavkazskii Aktsent, no. 10 (1–15
May 2000): 4.
3 Islam Saidaev, “Vinovaty li Chechentsy v tom, chto vynuzhdeny zashchish-
chat’ svoiu zhizn’,” Chechenskaia Pravda 3, no. 3 (February 2000): 11. See also
Alf Grannes, ‹Persons of Caucasian Nationality’ – Russian Negative Stereo-
types,” in Høiris and Yürükel, Contrasts and Solutions in the Caucasus, 18–33.
4 Yekaterina Grigoryeva, “No Talks with Aslan Maskhadov,” Moscow News,
no. 16 (26 April–2 May 2000): 2.
5 Cited in Lars Funch, “Cultural Boundaries and Identity Building in the
North Caucasus,” in Høiris and Yürükel, Contrasts and Solutions in the
Caucasus, 108–9.chapter one1 gviarf, f. vua, op. 1, 1841–42, d. 6440, Delo “Po raportu Raevskago,”
Report from Raevskii to Chernyshev, 15 March 1841, l. 2.
2 sssa, f. 433, op. 1, 1872–73, d. 19, Delo “Sochinenie uchitelei shkoly
Obshchestva za 1872 god,” Report, 1872, l. 4.
3 Ibid., l. 5.
4 Ibid., l. 6.
5 On the literary construction of the region, see Layton, Russian Literature
and Empire; Halbach, “Die Bergvölker (gorcy) als Gegner und Opfer”;
Ram, “Prisoners of the Caucasus.” For a discussion of imaginative litera-
ture and history writing, see Wiener, “Treating ‘Historical’ Sources as
Literary Texts.”
6 See Altstadt, The Azerbaijani Turks; Swietochowski, Russian Azerbaijan;
Suny, The Making of the Georgian Nation; Suny, Looking toward Ararat.
7 Narochnitskii, Istoriia narodov severnogo Kavkaza, 55; Peoples and Languages
of the Caucasus; Betrozov, Etnicheskaia istoriia Adygov, 45–6.
8 Volkova, Etnicheskii sostav naseleniia severnogo Kavkaza v xviii-nachale xx
veka, 15–44. On the history of the term “Cherkes,” probably of Turkic ori-
gin, see Betrozov, Etnicheskaia istoriia Adygov, 225–6.
9 G.V. Sollogub, “Predislovie,” zkoirgo 1 (1852): ii.
10 Said, Orientalism. Note Roland Barthes’s attention to the place in the
Western imagination of exotic Easterners, who served not as “the object,
the term of genuine consideration, but simply a cipher, a convenient sign
of communication” (from A Barthes Reader, 155), and of course Michel
Foucault’s sustained interest in epistemological order and the importance
of exclusion to the formation of identity.
Notes to pages ix–5