Thursday, December 22, 2016

Congrats to Özge for passing her PhD viva!

Congratulations to our student Özgecan Kesici-Ayoubi who passed her PhD viva this term. Well done! Her research titled "Attaining Modernity through Nationalism: The Kazakh Alash Orda Movement" was supervised by Prof. Malesevic. Below is an abstract of the PhD thesis:






















Title: Attaining Modernity through Nationalism: The Kazakh Alash Orda Movement

The analysis of the first Kazakh national movement, the Alash Orda movement, has traditionally been confined to strictly historiographic interpretations. By broadening the analysis through macro-sociological lenses, this dissertation examines the modes in which Kazakh nationhood was first conceptualised by a Western educated elite in the Kazakh Steppe. It argues that the Alash Orda movement resorted to nationalism in an attempt to speed up the process of modernising the nation. This argument is developed through an in-depth analysis of the literature on the legacies left behind by the Kazakh intellectuals. It demonstrates that the modernist intellectuals built upon previous Kazakh intellectuals’ work in promoting self-awareness and enlightenment. Moreover, their modernist ideas are exemplified through the discourse around sedentarisation of the traditionally nomadic Kazakhs, and increased self-determination of women. The thesis also examines the practice of nationalist movements that are traditionally engaged in myth-making and national history writing, and provides an analysis of the cultural and national ‘infrastructure’, in the forms of national education or literature that the intellectuals envisioned for Kazakh nationhood. Finally, it examines the demise of the movement and the legacies it left behind for modern Kazakh nationhood. Modernity was not achieved with the emergence of the movement. However, with the implementation of the Soviet Nationalities Policy, a layering process took place. The foundations of the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic were placed on understandings of Kazakh nationhood that the Alash Ordists had previously envisioned; modernity later ensued with the establishment of the Soviet Union. The dissertation hence argues that nationalism is not necessarily the result of modernity, but rather, could strategically be deployed as an attempt to attain modernity.

Thursday, December 8, 2016

Podcast receives university-wide SPARC funding

Our student-led sociology podcast "Dublin Calling" (SoundcloudiTunes, RSS), where students and staff from our faculty talk with famous sociologists about their work, but also about the life and struggles of PhD students and early career researchers, just received university-wide SPARC funding. Huge congrats to our PhD student Mark Doyle who played a crucial role in this application! The funding will be used to develop the podcast more and secure its funding for the next two years.

The aim of the SPARC programme at UCD is to help students and staff bring to life ideas for improving the university experience or the wider community. It gives students and staff a unique opportunity to work as equal partners and to stand-out amongst their peers as innovative thinkers and leaders. By working in partnership staff and students will not only achieve meaningful project results, they will also have the opportunity to develop and enhance their working relationship and come to a greater understanding of each other’s roles within the university.