Description
About the Author
Dominic Rubin studied at Oxford and SOAS and is a professor in the Languages and Literatures Department at Moscow University Touro. He is Professor of Religion and Philosophy at The Higher School of Economics, Moscow. He has lived in Russia for the last eleven years.
Reviews
'[Russia's Muslim Heartlands] is highly recommended to anyone with an interest in Russia, its Muslim communities or Islam in general. It provides fascinating insights into Russia's second largest religion, as well as the wide diversity of views within its Muslim communities.' -- International Affairs
''Russia's Muslim Heartlands' offers a kaleidoscopic view of the tremendous diversity of Russia's Muslims'. -- Journal of Modern History
'Rubin [shows] the immense diversity of Russia's national and religious cultures ... [his] writing style is reader-friendly and fresh [and he] demonstrates real perceptiveness.' -- Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
'[A] fascinating book . . . hugely rewarding'.
'[Russia's Muslim Heartlands provides] an important contribution to our understanding of the character and self-awareness of Muslims from Russia and the former Soviet Union as well as the interplay between Soviet upbringing and the new reassertion of Islam. It also provides a clear and well-thought out prognosis for the future.' -- Israel Journal of Foreign Affairs
'Islam in former Soviet states remains a little explored subject matter, and what literature does exist tends to focus on extremism in Chechnya. But as Dominic Rubin's new book shows, Islam in Russia and Central Asia is thriving, multifaceted and diverse. . . a fascinating read'.
'Russia's Muslim Heartlands is a remarkable achievement ... It provides a unique picture of Islam across the post-Soviet space ... [the book] could almost serve as a 'who's who' of Russian-speaking intellectuals working on Islam and of influential Islamic clergy.' -- Europe-Asia Studies
'The author's ingrained contextual knowledge, combined with curiosity [and] meticulous ethnographic research ... enables an empirically rich and and conceptually eclectic survey of religious experiences.' -- Religious Studies Review
'Rubin's conversations with different Muslim men and women across Russia and Central Asia are vibrant and engaging and historically and theologically well informed.' -- The Russian Review
'[Russia's Muslim Heartlands] reads more like a travelogue than a sociological study and this is its strength ... [it] contains a much richer, more nuanced and certainly much more informative content than anything else one cares to read on this subject.' -- Terrorism & Political Violence
'Dominic Rubin's travelogue provides a rich ethnographic tapestry of the former Soviet Muslim communities. Drawing from first hand observations, interviews and personal connections, he explores the varied and contradictory nature of Islam within Putin's Russia and the post-Soviet states.' -- Firouzeh Mostashari
'Rubin's book offers a stimulating look at Muslim life and identity in post-Soviet Russia. Through interviews with local clerics and scholars in Moscow, Tatarstan, Central Asia and the North Caucasus, Rubin asks critical questions about what it means to be Muslim in a post-Soviet space, how Russian and Muslim identities combine, and whether we can speak of Russia's Islam.' -- Iwona Kaliszewska
Book Information
ISBN 9781849048965
Author Dominic Rubin
Format Paperback
Page Count 256
Imprint C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd
Publisher C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd