The new Steppe is out

The new issue of Steppe has been dispatched to subscribers and arrived in my mailbox this morning (Ollie in Berlin received his today, too). Like the first issue, the new one greets the reader with a splendid cover. No surprise here, as it’s one of Christopher Herwig’s magnificent snapshots.
The contents of the second issue are as varied as they were last time around. While I have only managed to flick through the 114 pages over coffee, this promises to be great leisurely reading. Among the highlights:
Hamid Ismailov rereads and rediscovers Aitmatov’s Jamilia thanks to a newly published English translation, David Chioni Moore retells black poet Langston Hughes‘ travels in Central Asia in the 1930s, Matthieu and Mareile Paley visit Kyrgyz nomads in the Afghan Wakhan Corridor, Andrew Lawler discovers Victor Sarianidi’s amazing excavations in Turkmenistan, and Gulnara Abikeyeva presents her top-ten Central Asian films of all times.
You can subscribe to Steppe here. Back issues are also available for sale I think, just drop them a line.
Update: The writers of the magazine read blogs, too. In Josh Abrams’ report about Nauruz, it says:
This [Rakhmon’s recent cultural policies] is raising new fears that the Tajik president is leaning towards the [..] governance style of Turkmenistan’s recently deceased president […]. At least Rakhmon hasn’t asked to be called ‘Tajikbashi the Great’. Yet.


























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