ID | 135768 |
Title Proper | Gong beat against the ‘uncultured’ |
Other Title Information | contested notions of culture and civilization in Mongolia |
Language | ENG |
Author | Tsetsentsolmon, B |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article explores the Mongolian concept of ‘culture’ (soyol) and its transformation in the state socialist and post-socialist eras. The notion of culture and those without it – the soyolgui or ‘uncultured’ – played enormously important parts in the construction of the new society of the Mongolian People’s Republic. The history of the twentieth century shows a transformation of this highly normative concept from a category associated with teachings, doctrine, ethics and nurturing to one linked to modernist notions of hygiene, secular education, urbanism and cosmopolitanism. In addition, however, it became a category that included a set of historical styles and works thought of as national ‘cultural heritage’ (soyolyn öv). This was the result of a movement that in the late socialist period led to the critical re-evaluation of earlier Eurocentric uses of the ‘culture’ concept, and that sought new applications of the notion of ‘civilization’ – in particular by popularizing the metaphorical term ‘nomadic civilization’ (nüüdliin soyol irgenshil). I argue that these strands of thought have become central to the new nationalist politics of post-socialist Mongolia and form the basis of what remains by way of political orthodoxy, following the collapse of Soviet ideology. |
`In' analytical Note | Asian Ethnicity Vol.15, No.4; Sep.2014: p.422-438 |
Journal Source | Asian Ethinicity Vol: 15 No 4 |
Standard Number | Mongolia |