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T49ANT


Author-critic Forum: 'Translocality, Entrepreneurship and Middle Class Across Eurasia. Kyrgyzstan’s 'First Capitalists’ Since the Late Soviet Era' (A Routledge Ethnography by Philipp Schroeder) 
Convenor:
Philipp Schroeder (Nazarbayev University)
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Chair:
Jeanine Dagyeli (University of Vienna and Austrian Academy of Sciences)
Discussants:
Madeleine Reeves (University of Oxford)
Manja Stephan (Institute for Asian and African Studies, Humboldt University of Berlin)
Emil Nasritdinov (American University of Central Asia)
Format:
Scholarship-in-Progress forum
Theme:
Anthropology & Archaeology
Location:
207 (Floor 2)
Sessions:
Thursday 6 June, -
Time zone: Asia/Almaty

Abstract:

'Translocality, Entrepreneurship and Middle Class Across Eurasia', published in the Routledge Series on Economic and Social Transformations in Central and Inner Asia in 2024, is a comprehensive, multi-sited ethnography about the unfolding of capitalism across Eurasia and the advent of a new middle class since the late Soviet era.

Based on extensive fieldwork, the book follows three generations of ethnic Kyrgyz in three distinct eras and sites: The early bazaar traders of Novosibirsk (Russia), the post-2000 middlemen operating in Guangzhou (China) and the ‘new entrepreneurs’ who have emerged at home in Kyrgyzstan around 2015. The book advocates translocality as an innovative concept to better understand the dialectic of mobility and emplacement in contemporary livelihoods and value chains that transgress not only political borders, but also less tangible socio-cultural boundaries. Through this lens, the chapters forcefully demonstrate how ways of business-making align or conflict with notions of ethnic belonging, diaspora, sociability or gender, in and in-between various locations. Proposing the imaginary of commercial journeys, the book documents the aspirations, adjustments and struggles of an emergent middle class, whose neoliberal subjectivity is inspired by a flexible entrepreneurial spirit of ‘Kyrgyzness’, and who navigate in a market environment that recently has been shifting towards more actor diversification, service orientation and rule-based formalization.

This book will be of interest particularly to scholars in the fields of (economic) anthropology, post-socialist studies, migration, mobility and area studies with a focus on Central Asia and Eurasia.

(More information: https://www.routledge.com/Translocality-Entrepreneurship-and-Middle-Class-Across-Eurasia-Kyrgyzstans/Schrder/p/book/9781032657295)