Read Online HIGHLANDERS P Yo'av Karny Books

Read Online HIGHLANDERS P Yo'av Karny Books





Product details

  • Paperback 468 pages
  • Publisher Farrar, Straus and Giroux; 1st edition (December 5, 2001)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 0374528128




HIGHLANDERS P Yo'av Karny Books Reviews


  • Incredibly dry and surprisingly russo-centric
  • This book is a most honorable effort to introduce the unknown peoples of the Highlands. It is extremely well orgainzed, beautifully written, and full of information and suprises. My hat is off to the author for taking on this most important and daunting project. I highly reccommend this book to anyone with an interest in people and culture.
  • Israeli journalist Karny has assembled a massive and somewhat rambling book attempting to capture the history and spirit of the "Highlanders" who dwell in the Caucuses. Part history, part memoir, part travelogue, part contemporary reportage, the book would have benefited from slightly more focus. What we get is 70 pages on the Circassians, who are three tribes spread across several provinces and regions to the north of Georgia (and much of the Middle East and Western world). Then come 125 pages on Daghetsan, which borders the Caspian Sea, Azerbaijan, and Chechnya. Part three is 150 pages on Chechnya, which would have brought things to a nice climax. However, Karny leaves the Northern (currently Russian) Caucuses and presses on for a further-comparatively skimpy-55 pages on Armenia and Azerbaijan. This last section is troublesome in that by including it, Karny's book discusses all the major players in the region except Georgia! (Perhaps he felt that country had already been well-covered in Peter Nasmyth's recent book, Georgia In the Mountains of Poetry) One is left with the impression that he has included it because the Azeri-Armenian conflict is such a vivid illustration of his thesis concerning the use and manipulation of history and memory in the region that he couldn't resist putting it in.
    The subjectivity of history and memory in the Caucuses is one of Karny's main themes, as is the fact that many of the unique cultures and languages are dying out, victims of modernization and Russian schools. Karny exhibits a marked ambivalence about the highlander desire to never forget the past. While he admires this trait for its role in maintaining culture, and resisting invaders, he also sees it as a force of division in contemporary times-sometimes leading to self-destruction (in the case of Chechnya). Of course the history he shares gives plenty of justification for continued anger against the Russians, who invaded first in the 1830s, occupied the area, and under Stalin engaged in mass relocation and killings against many Caucasian nationalities.
    The book emerged from a number of trips Karny took to the region from 1993-1999, and he writes with a steady knowledge of history and contemporary events. He is perhaps a little too fond of reproducing conversations with various officials he meets with, but his flair for describing the everyday people he meets makes up for it. The book is peppered throughout with photos taken on his travels which aren't always the best, but are invaluable for putting a face on the people and places he talk about. If nothing else, one should read the section on Chechnya for a better understanding on why they continue to resist rule from Moscow. Particularly enlightening is his discussions of the various strains of Sufism most Chechens follow, and how they influence the resistance.
  • I loved this book. It's long. It's detailed. And yet it's broken into dozens of small stories--each one well written and highly documentary.

    Yo'av Karny does a phenomenal job of presenting vignettes of culture--demonstrated by the people he has met, and the stories they have to tell. In a sense, he has created a short encyclopedia of life--life and culture which has, and even more so, will likely be erased with the passing of the next couple generations.

    Avars - Lezgins - Azeris - Cherkess - Dargin - Chechen - Inguish - Kumyk -- each told about in some detail. Read about them all, how they got where they are, how they have lost much of their identity already, and what the future may hold.
  • A magnificent read, with a gentle poetry all its own. This meticulously reasearched book is an absolute must-read (no, a must-own) for anyone with a thirst for history or the world in which we live today. You will learn more about the post-Soviet Caucasus republics and their indigenous peoples than by reading any other COLLECTION of works. Karny has obviously spent time among his subjects, and his respect for each (by our standards) idiosyncracy shines through his writing. Read this book, and you will never read another news report on the war in Chechnya again.
  • Thanks to Yo'av Karny for such an informative book. I was pleasantly surprised to find such a detailed account of my Circassian History. This book really hit home with me, and I found myself weeping. Weeping because it brought back memories and stories that my grandfather used to tell me as a child. This book even covers the story of the Circassians living not only in the Caucasus, but also in the Golan Heights. Yo'av reveals both the good and bad side of Circassians, and Circassian history. Circassians suffered our own Genocide at the hands of various Russian tyrants. On the other hand, Circassian warriors were known for their ruthless actions during all of our battles. That is why Circassians were chosen by countless of kings and presidents alike to act as body guards. That is also why we were given the name "CHERKESS" (Neck Cutters) by our enemies. When European and Middle Eastern mothers wanted to frighten their childeren, they would warn them that if they weren't good, THE CHERKESS would come for them. Those are the sad facts. This book was a pleasure to read. Thank You Yo'av......Yaz Barsbay
  • One of my favorite books. A detailed but lyrical and whimsical record of one of the most complex regions on Earth. Karny brings to life the past of the Caucasus and links it to the complexities of its present, and that of the rest of the former USSR using narratives from individuals he ahs interviewed. As a mark of the sympathy and accuracy of his reporting is that, as an Israeli he was able to travel through this area, and Jordan, and continue to obtain access to sources.

    I bought this book on remainder at a sale. It's now so dog eared from over use and being taken on travels I'm just ordering a new copy!

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