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History and Identity among the Shahsevan
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2022
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Until recently, a dominant approach in the history and anthropology of the Middle East has rested on the assumption that an “ethnic” or “tribal” group is, or approximates, a biologically self-perpetuating population, sharing elements of a common culture and identifying itself and being identified with others as a separate category. This fundamentally objectivist approach is a refinement of an older anthropological tradition in which “cultures” are treated as coterminous with “tribes”, “societies”, “peoples”. Even if the many current adherents of this approach do not take the biological assumptions too literally, there is still a strong tendency to conceive of populations as divided into formally bounded, clear-cut, ethnic groups or tribes, with every person belonging to one: a conception that facilitates tidy maps, neat lists of the traits associated with each group, a rigorous classification of types, and cross-cultural comparison.
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References
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31 Tigranov, Iz Obshchestvenno …, pp.104-9. An earlier writer, Artamonov, Severniy Azerbaydzhan, who travelled in Shahsevan lands in 1889 collecting geographical information for military purposes, recorded with some sympathy the plight of the Shahsevan after the border closure of 1884, though he refrained from any historical or theoretical analysis of the situation.
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35 This was “false consciousness” since several of the chiefs, though officially deposed, and with much of their resources threatened by Land Reform, nevertheless retained considerable economic power and political influence over the tribespeople. Cf. Black, Jacob “Tyranny as a strategy for survival: Luri facts versus an anthropological mystique”, Man (N.S.), Vol.7 (1972), pp.614-34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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