Encounters at the Edge of the Muslim World

A Political Memoir of Kyrgyzstan

By (author) Eugene Huskey

Publication date:

08 September 2018

Length of book:

266 pages

Publisher

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

ISBN-13: 9781538117071

This unique work provides the only sustained political history of independent Kyrgyzstan, explaining events in the context of its society and the broader international order. Drawing on three decades of personal encounters with ordinary citizens and leading public figures, Eugene Huskey takes readers on a journey through the unlikely birth and tumultuous development of Central Asia’s most open society. Starting with the heady, romantic first days of independence and moving through the popular uprisings and inter-ethnic violence of recent years, he chronicles the struggles of a new state to establish a democratic order and to find its place in the international community, while caught between China, the Middle East, and the Russian world. At the center are the very human stories of leaders and citizens trying to navigate the transition from communism, where identities, property, and the rules of the political game were constantly in dispute. With citizens of independent Kyrgyzstan stripped of their Soviet identity, the book illustrates how alternative loyalties based on kinship, geography, statehood, and religion competed for prominence in ways that often complicated the new country’s political, social, and economic development.

No American scholar has quite the depth of understanding of Kyrgyzstan that Eugene Huskey commands, and in this work he puts both his impressive analytical skills and his vast knowledge and experience to excellent use in a work that teaches a great deal and remains remarkably engaging and warm. This book, which has no equal in the current literature, is a first-person account of the protracted birth, at times painful and at times joyous, of Central Asia’s first modern democracy. It is an important accomplishment and the most significant contribution to date to the English-language literature concerning Kyrgyzstan.