1990s in kazakhstan: country changed. lives changed

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1990 1990 S S IN KAZAKHSTAN: IN KAZAKHSTAN: COUNTRY CHANGED, COUNTRY CHANGED, LIVES CHANGED. LIVES CHANGED. Darya Bukhtoyarova SHSS Seminar Series March 2012

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Darya Bukhtoyarova presented this talk as a part of SHSS Seminar Series at Nazarbayev University in Astana, Kazakhstan. Darya was trained as an anthropologist and now works as a reference librarian at Nazarbayev University Library.

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Page 1: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

19901990SS IN KAZAKHSTAN: IN KAZAKHSTAN: COUNTRY CHANGED, COUNTRY CHANGED,

LIVES CHANGED. LIVES CHANGED. Darya BukhtoyarovaSHSS Seminar Series

March 2012

Page 2: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

DECEMBER 1991 – DISSOLUTION OF THE SOVIET UNION

Alexander Zemlianichenko/AP

Boris Yeltsin and Mikhail Gorbachev, 1991

Page 3: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

KAZAKHSTAN IN 1991 – THE LAST TO LEAVE USSR

• Lithuania – March 11, 1990• Latvia – May 4, 1990• Georgia – April 9, 1991• Estonia – August 20, 1991• Latvia – August 21, 1991• Ukraine – August 24, 1991• Belarus – August 25, 1991• Moldova – August 27, 1991• Azerbaijan – August 30, 1991• Kyrgyzstan – August 31, 1991• Uzbekistan – September 1, 1991• Tajikistan – September 9, 1991• Armenia – September 21, 1991• Turkmenistan – October 16, 1991• Kazakhstan – December 16, 1991• Russia – December 24, 1991

“independence… thrust upon Kazakhstan” (Bhavna Dave, 2007)

Referendum in March 1991: 94.1% of population voted for remaining in the Soviet Union

Page 4: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

ETHNIC DIVERSITY

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/commonwealth.html

Page 5: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

LARGEST CITIES

CIA Map of Kazakhstan 2001

Page 6: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

SHYMKENT IN 1991

• 3d largest city in the country• population = over 600,00 (735,000 as of

2010)• developed industrial center: oil, metallurgy,

rubber, concrete, pharmaceuticals, consumer goods, etc

• regional center but still a periphery compared to Almaty

• higher percent of the population ethnically Kazakh than in other oblast’; large percent of ethnic Uzbeks

• high rural population, constant migration to the city

• often stigmatized in the rest of the country, nicknamed…

• “Texas”

Page 7: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

CRISIS OF THE 1990S

• Industrial production decreases dramatically: by 40% between 1991 and 1996

• Unemployment skyrockets: 12% in 1996, 24 % in 1997, 35% of population lives below the poverty line in 1996

• General sense of uncertainty: political, ethnic, economic…

Page 8: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

DOESN’T THIS REMIND YOU OF SOMETHING?...

Page 9: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

RESEARCH QUESTIONS

• How did Kazakhstani residents perceive and experience the 1990s in general? How is this time described today?

• What were some of the major challenges and how did people deal with them in everyday life?

• In dire economic conditions and with a rapid change of an economic paradigm, how did people in Kazakhstan make their living?

• How did factors like gender, ethnicity or class/family background shape their experiences?

Page 10: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

ANTHROPOLOGICAL METHODSANTHROPOLOGICAL METHODS• 2 months of research in Shymkent in summer 2009

• 12 in-depth interviews – life histories with particular focus on 1990s• 42 - 71 years old• 9 women and 3 men• different ethnic backgrounds• snowball sampling

• 20+ short conversations

Page 11: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

FROM LIFE HISTORIES TO MAIN FROM LIFE HISTORIES TO MAIN THEMESTHEMES

• “awful conditions:” lack of utilities;

• unemployment and professional change;

• change of personhood: importance of self-reliance;

• networking and mutual support

Page 12: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

““ABSENCE OF CIVILIZATION ABSENCE OF CIVILIZATION GOODS”GOODS”

• Shymkent – problems with gas, electricity, heating and water, especially in 1996-1998

• One of the most difficult aspects of 1990s, a “monstrous experiment on people”

• Increased burden on women (cooking, washing, ironing…)

• Metaphor for degradation and backwardness• Electricity and heating become the most valuable

commodities• But also humor and warmth when remembering

community life and mutual help

Page 13: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

UNEMPLOYMENT AND JOB UNEMPLOYMENT AND JOB CHANGESCHANGES

• Unemployment: 12% in 1996, 24 % in 1997 (Vermer 1998; Isteleulova 1996), welfare – practically non-existent

• 7 out 12 informants changed their work sphere after 1991, often more than once

• Bricolage – making creative and resourceful use of whatever materials are at hand (Levi-Strauss 1961); working a lot of small jobs

• Making non-professional skills into business: sewing and knitting, cooking, cleaning, home repairs, language skills

• Importance of small-scale trade (street, market, door-to-door, direct sales)

Page 14: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

GENDER-SPECIFIC PROFESSIONAL CHALLENGES

• Women faced discrimination if they were pregnant, had small children, or were simply young

• Men working in industrial sector were in a particular risk group

• It was more psychologically difficult for men to switch to petty trade or performing house chores (seen as non-masculine) or even start earning with their hobbies (manhood was very closely tied to profession)

• Stories of families working in a join effort of surviving, not individual professionals excelling in their careers

Page 15: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

CHANGE OF PERSONHOOD

• Elizabeth Dunn: ethnography of Polish workers becoming “self-activating, self-directed, self-monitoring beings”

• Self-reliance became very important, especially for those in business

• But many still feel a sense of nostalgia for certainty of the Soviet era

• Neoliberal market VS controlling state – some sense of agency, but it’s not complete

Page 16: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

NETWORKSNETWORKS

• People in the city receiving help from auls and “living on credit” from family (current financial crisis in Greece – people also moving out to family farms in the countryside)

• Professional networks• Moral support and a sense of community

Page 17: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

NARRATIVES AS CONSTRUCTIVENARRATIVES AS CONSTRUCTIVE

• Nancy Ries: discursive world doesn’t reflect social action, but helps construct it.

• Common themes show how people interpreted and used these changes in Shymkent.

• The dominant narrative about the 1990s tells us something about the world today

Page 18: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

““STRANGE KIND OF NORMALCY”STRANGE KIND OF NORMALCY”

• Nancy Ries’s 1995 visit to Moscow: a “ritualistic transitional period has come to a close, and Moscow life, however drastically rearranged, now takes place on a plane of a strange kind of normalcy”

• Experience of Shymkent residents – like, yet unlike others in postsocialist world

• Ethnographic perspective is crucial to understanding periods of change, uncertainty: understanding large processes at work in everyday life.

Page 19: 1990s in Kazakhstan: Country Changed. Lives Changed

THANK YOU!QUESTIONS?