Orientalism and Empire. North Caucasus Mountain Peoples and the Georgian Frontier, 1845-1917

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14 “kartuli teatri,” iveria, no. 11 (1882):90–1. For commentary on the propen-
sity of the colonial powers to educate “natives” but then deny them access
to positions of respect and authority within the colonial state, note Ander-
son, Imagined Communities, 140.
15 gr. kipshidze, “saistorio,” iveria, no. 10 (October 1882):115–28.
16 z. chichinadze, “kartuli gazetebi,” sakartvelos kalendari 1 (1897):466.
17 rgia, f. 1263, op. 2, 1903, d. 5616, Memorandum, Golitsyn, ll. 207–8;
Surguladze, I.G. Chavchavadze, 155.
18 See Rayfield, The Literature of Georgia, 162–3. On the Georgian press gener-
ally, see z. chichinadze, “kartuli gazetebi,” sakartvelos kalendari 1
(1897):462–8.
19 “Spor ob avtonomii,” Vesennii potok, no. 1 (19 April 1906):1; “Ot re-
daktsii,” Kavkazskaia zhizn’, no. 1 (21 September 1906):1; M. N-dze, “Dva
slova ob avtonomii,” Kavkazskaia zhizn’, no. 3 (23 September 1906): 1;
Vozrozhdenie, no. 1 (1 October 1905):1; Spravedlivost’, no. 2 (4 May 1906):1.
20 Kavkazskii zapros’ v gosudarstvennoi dume, 67–71.
21 Confer, France and Algeria, 10. The impact of the 1857 revolt of the sepoys
of the Bengal Army upon the British is another comparative example. See
Metcalf, Ideologies of the Raj, 30–1.
22 rgia, f. 573, op. 3, 1886, d. 4878, Report from Ministry of War to Council
of Ministers, 19 November 1885, and subsequent lists, ll. 3–23.
23 Petrovich, The Emergence of Russian Panslavism, 1856–1870; Aksakov, pss,
1:1–5, 14, 33–6, 50, 95, 132, 219.
24 Dowler, Dostoevsky, Grigor’ev and Native Soil Conservatism.
25 Cited in MacKenzie, The Lion of Tashkent, 198.
26 Bogdanovich, Dvadtsatipiatiletie velikoi osvoboditel’noi voiny.
27 Kireevskii, “Deviatnadtsatyi vek,” in Kireevskii, pss, 1:104; Khomiakov,
“Zapiski o vsemirnoi istorii,” part 2, in Khomiakov, pss, 6.
28 For example, in Rus’, 12 January 1885, in Aksakov, Slavianskii vopros,
1860–1886, 606; also see Klier, Imperial Russia’s Jewish Question, 1855–1881,
153–6.
29 Nikitin, Slavianskie Komitety v Rossii v 1858–1876 godakh, 33–9, 82–3, 291.
30 Aksakov, Slavianskii vopros, 1860–1886, 148.
31 Danilevskii, Rossiia i Evropa, 132.
32 Ibid., 111.
33 Belinskii, “Obshchee znachenie slova literatura” (1842–44), in Belinskii,
pss, 5:632–3.
34 Belinskii, “Istoriia Malorossii” (1842), in Belinskii, pss, 7:44–65. See also
Walicki, A History of Russian Thought from the Enlightenment to Marxism,
131–40. On Belinskii and Ukraine, see Rutherford, “Vissarion Belinskii
and the Ukrainian National Question.”
35 Danilevskii, Rossiia i Evropa, 93; also see 239.
36 Ibid., 37.


Notes to pages 128–31
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