Genealogy of Being in Postcolonial Kazakh Culture: Re-Reading the Words of Edification

Contemporary post/decolonial discourses in Kazakhstan have completely excluded the following issue from the field of narrative: the question of critically reevaluating the pre-colonial cultural structure. These discourses consider current issues mostly as a result of colonialism and overemphasize ex...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Merey Kossyn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2024-07-01
Series:Comparative Literature: East & West
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/25723618.2024.2433842
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850120468152975360
author Merey Kossyn
author_facet Merey Kossyn
author_sort Merey Kossyn
collection DOAJ
description Contemporary post/decolonial discourses in Kazakhstan have completely excluded the following issue from the field of narrative: the question of critically reevaluating the pre-colonial cultural structure. These discourses consider current issues mostly as a result of colonialism and overemphasize external factors. It is important to read and decipher the symbols of the cultural structure to understand the origins of authoritarianism and other socio-political problems. This article aims to investigate the origins of notions of the human being and its existence in the postcolonial Kazakh culture through comparing it to its pre-colonial cultural context. I will be working with Abai’s Words of Edification, which is a collection of texts written in prose in the form of a free philosophical meditation, and it is an apt source for the investigation of the origin of the notion of human existence. The politicization of Abai’s figure starting from the Soviet period and continuing in the postcolonial era obscures the initial questions in the text, and several lines from the Words of Edification engendered the utmost controversy and overshadowed the rest of the text. The aim of this article is to demythologize the poet’s image and focus on symbols hitherto unread.
format Article
id doaj-art-b0a3afeea7d14de48d09cd8bddffcd94
institution OA Journals
issn 2572-3618
language English
publishDate 2024-07-01
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
record_format Article
series Comparative Literature: East & West
spelling doaj-art-b0a3afeea7d14de48d09cd8bddffcd942025-08-20T02:35:21ZengTaylor & Francis GroupComparative Literature: East & West2572-36182024-07-018219620610.1080/25723618.2024.2433842Genealogy of Being in Postcolonial Kazakh Culture: Re-Reading the Words of EdificationMerey Kossyn0Department of Philosophy, L.N. Gumilyov Eurasian National University, Astana, KazakhstanContemporary post/decolonial discourses in Kazakhstan have completely excluded the following issue from the field of narrative: the question of critically reevaluating the pre-colonial cultural structure. These discourses consider current issues mostly as a result of colonialism and overemphasize external factors. It is important to read and decipher the symbols of the cultural structure to understand the origins of authoritarianism and other socio-political problems. This article aims to investigate the origins of notions of the human being and its existence in the postcolonial Kazakh culture through comparing it to its pre-colonial cultural context. I will be working with Abai’s Words of Edification, which is a collection of texts written in prose in the form of a free philosophical meditation, and it is an apt source for the investigation of the origin of the notion of human existence. The politicization of Abai’s figure starting from the Soviet period and continuing in the postcolonial era obscures the initial questions in the text, and several lines from the Words of Edification engendered the utmost controversy and overshadowed the rest of the text. The aim of this article is to demythologize the poet’s image and focus on symbols hitherto unread.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/25723618.2024.2433842Postcolonial Kazakhstandecolonizing knowledgedemythologizing Abainon-western existentialismmodernity/colonialitydecolonial discourses
spellingShingle Merey Kossyn
Genealogy of Being in Postcolonial Kazakh Culture: Re-Reading the Words of Edification
Comparative Literature: East & West
Postcolonial Kazakhstan
decolonizing knowledge
demythologizing Abai
non-western existentialism
modernity/coloniality
decolonial discourses
title Genealogy of Being in Postcolonial Kazakh Culture: Re-Reading the Words of Edification
title_full Genealogy of Being in Postcolonial Kazakh Culture: Re-Reading the Words of Edification
title_fullStr Genealogy of Being in Postcolonial Kazakh Culture: Re-Reading the Words of Edification
title_full_unstemmed Genealogy of Being in Postcolonial Kazakh Culture: Re-Reading the Words of Edification
title_short Genealogy of Being in Postcolonial Kazakh Culture: Re-Reading the Words of Edification
title_sort genealogy of being in postcolonial kazakh culture re reading the words of edification
topic Postcolonial Kazakhstan
decolonizing knowledge
demythologizing Abai
non-western existentialism
modernity/coloniality
decolonial discourses
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/25723618.2024.2433842
work_keys_str_mv AT mereykossyn genealogyofbeinginpostcolonialkazakhculturerereadingthewordsofedification