ABSTRACT

This book contends that the discourses of jihadism in Russia's North Caucasus, and their offshoots in other parts of the Russian Federation, are not just reflections of jihadi ideologies that came from abroad, rather that post-Soviet jihadism is a phenomenon best understood when placed in the broader cultural environment in which it emerged, an environment which comprises the North Caucasus, the whole of Russia, and beyond. It examines how post-Soviet jihadism is also part of global processes, in this case, global jihadism, explores how post-Soviet jihadism bears the imprint of the preceding Soviet context especially in terms of symbols, discursive tools, interpretational frameworks, and dissemination strategies, and discusses how, ironically, Russian-speaking jihadism is an expansionist idea for uniting all Russian regions on a supra-ethnic principle, but an idea that was not born in Moscow or St. Petersburg. Overall, the book demonstrates that Russian-speaking jihadism is a completely new ideology, which nevertheless has its origins in the intellectual and cultural heritage of the Soviet era and in the broader trends of post-Soviet society and culture.

chapter |28 pages

Introduction

part I|42 pages

The Chechen Genealogy of Russian Jihadism

chapter 1|16 pages

Zelimkhan Yandarbiev

Caucasianness, USSR, and Global Jihad

chapter 2|15 pages

“Russism” and the Islamization of the Chechen Resistance

Dzhokhar Dudaev and Shamil Basaev

chapter |2 pages

Conclusion to Part I

part II|119 pages

Beyond Chechnya

chapter 4|16 pages

From Ichkeria to the Caucasus Emirate

chapter 5|30 pages

Iasin Rasulov

“Academic Jihad” and Orientalism

chapter 6|15 pages

Jihad as Passionarity

Said Buriatskii and Lev Gumilev 1

chapter 7|17 pages

Timur Mutsuraev

Russophone Jihad Songs as a Post-Soviet Phenomenon

chapter 8|21 pages

Airat Vakhitov (Salman Bulgarskii)

Passionarity, Justice, and Sacrifice

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion to Part II

chapter |13 pages

Conclusion