Language politics and nationalism in post-soviet Kazakhstan : an analysis

In modern times, the key to nation-building in a multi-ethnic country lies in the formation of a national identity, which often cannot circumvent the task of constructing a common language. After a quarter of century of independence, Kazakhstan, the largest and economically strongest former Soviet r...

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Main Author: Zhang, Yu
Other Authors: Wu Fengshi
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69787
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-697872020-11-01T08:06:32Z Language politics and nationalism in post-soviet Kazakhstan : an analysis Zhang, Yu Wu Fengshi S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies DRNTU::Social sciences::Political science In modern times, the key to nation-building in a multi-ethnic country lies in the formation of a national identity, which often cannot circumvent the task of constructing a common language. After a quarter of century of independence, Kazakhstan, the largest and economically strongest former Soviet republic in Central Asia, still faces the tasks of de-Russification and reducing the lingering impact of the Russian language on its society. This dissertation investigates language politics in relation to nation-building in Kazakhstan in the post-Soviet era. It provides background information and examines the major problems in the formation of national identity in the multi-lingual Kazakhstani society. It analyzes Kazakhstan’s language policies since 1987, and assesses the impact on the promotion of the Kazakh language and the status of Russian language. The main finding of the dissertation is that the unsolved issue of national language remains as a critical challenge to overall formation of a post-Soviet national identity in Kazakhstan, which is of the potential to inflict broader conflicts between the Kazakh majority and Russian minority populations. The authorities in Kazakhstan have made their effort to promote the Kazakh language as a state language. However, Russian language is still dominating in all spheres of social and even political life. Unless the Kazakhstan state can find a way to inspire and promote social solidarity and cohesion beyond linguistic terms, the dichotomy of Kazakh versus Russian can continue to delay nation-building processes in the country. Master of Science (Asian Studies) 2017-03-27T08:09:12Z 2017-03-27T08:09:12Z 2017 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69787 en 51 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Political science
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Political science
Zhang, Yu
Language politics and nationalism in post-soviet Kazakhstan : an analysis
description In modern times, the key to nation-building in a multi-ethnic country lies in the formation of a national identity, which often cannot circumvent the task of constructing a common language. After a quarter of century of independence, Kazakhstan, the largest and economically strongest former Soviet republic in Central Asia, still faces the tasks of de-Russification and reducing the lingering impact of the Russian language on its society. This dissertation investigates language politics in relation to nation-building in Kazakhstan in the post-Soviet era. It provides background information and examines the major problems in the formation of national identity in the multi-lingual Kazakhstani society. It analyzes Kazakhstan’s language policies since 1987, and assesses the impact on the promotion of the Kazakh language and the status of Russian language. The main finding of the dissertation is that the unsolved issue of national language remains as a critical challenge to overall formation of a post-Soviet national identity in Kazakhstan, which is of the potential to inflict broader conflicts between the Kazakh majority and Russian minority populations. The authorities in Kazakhstan have made their effort to promote the Kazakh language as a state language. However, Russian language is still dominating in all spheres of social and even political life. Unless the Kazakhstan state can find a way to inspire and promote social solidarity and cohesion beyond linguistic terms, the dichotomy of Kazakh versus Russian can continue to delay nation-building processes in the country.
author2 Wu Fengshi
author_facet Wu Fengshi
Zhang, Yu
format Theses and Dissertations
author Zhang, Yu
author_sort Zhang, Yu
title Language politics and nationalism in post-soviet Kazakhstan : an analysis
title_short Language politics and nationalism in post-soviet Kazakhstan : an analysis
title_full Language politics and nationalism in post-soviet Kazakhstan : an analysis
title_fullStr Language politics and nationalism in post-soviet Kazakhstan : an analysis
title_full_unstemmed Language politics and nationalism in post-soviet Kazakhstan : an analysis
title_sort language politics and nationalism in post-soviet kazakhstan : an analysis
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69787
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