Being a Woman and Being Tatar uses ethnographic research to explore the complex identities of Tatar women. It invites readers to better understand the Tatar womens ethnic, religious, and geographical diversity across Eastern Europe and Russia, and is vauable for students and researchers gender studies and cultural anthropology.
Being a Woman and Being Tatar uses ethnographic research to explore the multifaceted and complex identities - such as gender, ethnicity, religion of Tatar women in Siberia and Estonia.
Focusing on the intersections and interactions of multiple identities and exploring that focus through Tatar womens own voices, narratives, and subjectivity, this book unfolds womens stories about what it means to be a woman and to be a Tatar in a post-Soviet situation through narrations of their aspirations, their sexuality, their relationship with relatives, and the dynamics of power and hierarchy they feel themselves within. It explores how identity and tradition are shaped by state politics, and also brings attention to new geographical areas, including the Tyumen region and Estonia.
Being a Woman and Being Tatar will demonstrate to those studying gender studies and cultural anthropology the intricacies of Tatar womens identities, and invites readers to better understand the Tatar womens diversity across Eastern Europe and Russia.