Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-q99xh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-21T17:16:19.106Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

References

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 August 2021

Magnus Marsden
Affiliation:
University of Sussex

Summary

Type
Chapter
Information
Beyond the Silk Roads
Trade, Mobility and Geopolitics across Eurasia
, pp. 269 - 288
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

References

Aharon, Sara. 2011. From Kabul to Queens: The Jews of Afghanistan and Their Move to the United States. New York: Decalogue Books/American Sephardi Foundation.Google Scholar
Ahmed, Faiz. 2017. Afghanistan Rising: Islamic Law and Statecraft between the Ottoman and British Empire. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ahmed, Faiz 2016. ‘Contested Subjects: Ottoman and British Jurisdictional Quarrels in re Afghans and Indian Muslims’. Journal of the Ottoman and Turkish Studies Association 3(2): 325–46.Google Scholar
Ahmed, Shahab. 2015. What Is Islam? The Importance of Being Islamic. Princeton: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alavi, Seema. 2015. Muslim Cosmopolitanism in the Age of Empire. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Anderson, Edward and Clibbens, Patrick. 2018. ‘“Smugglers of Truth”: The Indian Diaspora, Hindu Nationalism, and the Emergency (1975–77)’. Modern Asian Studies 52(5): 1729–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anderson, Paul. 2020. ‘“Not a Silk Road”: Trading Networks between China and the Middle East as a Dynamic Interaction of Competing Eurasian Geographies’. Global Networks 20(4): 708–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anderson, Paul 2019. ‘The Syrian Conflict in Transnational Perspective: Traders, Migrants and State Formation Across Asia’. Journal of Eurasian Studies 10(1): 7584.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anderson, Paul 2011. ‘“The Piety of the Gift”: Selfhood and Sociality in the Egyptian Mosque Movement’. Anthropological Theory 11(1):119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anderson, Paul Forthcoming (c). Exchange Ideologies and Merchant Politics in Post-Baathist Aleppo. Cornell: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Anderson, Paul Forthcoming (b). ‘The Social Basis of Syrian Diplomacy: Transnational Kinship Networks of the Asad Regime’. History and Anthropology.Google Scholar
Anderson, Paul Forthcoming (a). ‘Between West and East Asia: the Scope and Stability of Arab Trading Networks in China’. In Circulation and Consumption in the Middle East, Boissiere, T. and Morvan, Y. (eds), Paris: Diacritiques.Google Scholar
Anwar, Zahid. 2013. ‘Gwadar Deep Sea Port’s Emergence as Regional Trade and Transportation Hub: Prospects and Problems’. Journal of Political Studies 1(2): 97112.Google Scholar
Appadurai, Arjun. 1986. ‘Introduction’. In Appadurai, Arjun (ed.), The Social Life of Things, pp. 363. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aras, B. and Fidan, H.. 2009. ‘Turkey and Eurasia: Frontiers of a New Geographic Imagination’. New Perspectives on Turkey 40(2009): 193215.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arsan, Andrew. 2011. Interlopers of Empire: The Lebanese Diaspora in Colonial French West Africa. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Asad, Talal. 1973. ‘Anthropology and the Colonial Encounter’. In Asad, Talal (ed.), Anthropology and the Colonial Encounter, pp. 921. London: Garnet Publishing.Google Scholar
Aslanian, David Sebouh. 2014. From the Indian Ocean to the Mediterranean: The Global Trade Networks of Armenian Merchants from New Julfa. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Atia, Mona. 2013. Building a House in Heaven: Pious Neoliberalism and Islamic Charity in Egypt. Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Augé, Marc. 1992. Non-places: Introduction to an Anthropology of Supermodernity. London: Verso.Google Scholar
Aydin, Cemal. 2017. The Idea of the Muslim World. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
BBC. ‘From Kabul to Kiev: Mustafa Nayyem’s Story’. www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p029nlx5.Google Scholar
Baghdiantz-McCabe, Ina, Harlaftis, Gelina and Minoglou, Ionna Pepelasis (eds). 2005. Diaspora Entrepreneurial Networks: Four Centuries of History. Oxford: Berg.Google Scholar
Balci, Bayram. 2003. ‘Les Ouzbeks d’Arabie Saoudite entre integration et renouveau identitaire via le pelerinage’. Central Asian Survey 22(1): 2344.Google Scholar
Baldauf, Ingeborg, Gammer, Moshe and Loy, Thomas (eds). 2008. Bukharan Jews in the 20th Century: History, Experience and Narration. Wiesbaden: Reichert.Google Scholar
Bashir, Shahzad. 2014. ‘On Islamic Time: Rethinking Chronology in the Historiography of Muslim Societies’. History & Theory 53(4): 519–44.Google Scholar
Bashir, Shahzad and Crews, Robert (eds). 2012. Under the Drones: Modern Lives in the Afghanistan-Pakistan Borderlands. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bassin, Mark and Aksenov, Konstantin. 2006. ‘Mackinder and the Heartland Theory in Post-Soviet Geopolitical Discourse’. Geopolitics 11(1): 99118.Google Scholar
Baumann, Gerd. 1996. Contesting Culture: Discourses of Identity in Multi-ethnic London. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bayly, Christopher. 1996. Empire and Information: Intelligence Gathering and Social Communication in India, 1780–1870. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bayly, Martin. 2018. Taming the Imperial Imagination Colonial Knowledge, International Relations, and the Anglo-Afghan Encounter, 1808–1878. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bayly, Martin. 2014. ‘Imperial Ontological (In)security: “Buffer States”, International Relations and the Case of Anglo-Afghan Relations, 1808–1878’. European Journal of International Relations 21(4): 816–40.Google Scholar
Bayly, Susan. 2007. Asian Voices in a Postcolonial Age: Vietnam, India and Beyond. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Beeman, W. 1976. ‘Status, Style and Strategy in Iranian Interaction’. Anthropological Linguistics 18(7): 305–22.Google Scholar
Beeman, W. 2010. ‘Sociolinguistics in the Iranian World’. In Ball, Martin J. (ed.), The Routledge Handbook of Sociolinguistics around the World, pp. 139–48. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Bilgin, P. and Bilgiç, A.. 2011. ‘Turkey’s “New” Foreign Policy toward Eurasia’. Eurasian Geography and Economics 52(2): 173–95.Google Scholar
Belguidoum, Saïd and Pliez, Olivier. 2015. ‘Pratiques transnationales dans un comptoir de “la Route de la soie”: Algeriens et Egyptiens a Yiwu (Chine)’. Les cahiers d’EMAM 26.Google Scholar
Belguidoum, Saïd and Pliez, Olivier. 2012. ‘Construire une route de la soie entre l’Algerie et la Chine’. Diasporas, histoire et societies 20: 115–30.Google Scholar
Benussi, Matteo. 2018. ‘Ethnic Muslims and the “Halal Movement” in Tatarstan’. Anthropological Journal of European Cultures 27(1): 8893.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bertoncello, B., Bredeloup, S. and Pliez, O.. 2009. ‘Hong Kong, Guangzhou, Yiwu: De nouveaux comptoirs africains en Chine’. Critique internationale 44: 105–21.Google Scholar
Bloch, Alexia. 2017. Sex, Love, and Migration: Postsocialism, Modernity, and Intimacy from Istanbul to the Arctic. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bloch, Alexia. 2011. ‘Intimate Circuits: Modernity, Migration and Marriage among Post‐Soviet Women in Turkey’. Global Networks 11(2): 504–21.Google Scholar
Bloch, Maurice. 1999. ‘Commensality and Poisoning’. Social Research 66(1): 133–49.Google Scholar
Bodomo, Adams B. and Ma, Grace. 2010. ‘From Guangzhou to Yiwu: Emerging Facets of the African Diaspora in China’. International Journal of African Renaissance Studies 5(2): 283–89.Google Scholar
Bodomo, Adams. 2010. ‘The African Trading Community in Guangzhou: An Emerging Bridge for Africa–China Relations’. China Quarterly 203: 693707.Google Scholar
Bonnenfant, Işık Kuşçu. 2017. ‘Constructing the Uyghur Diaspora: Identity Politics and the Transnational Uyghur Community’. In Ercilasun, Güljanat Kurmangaliyeva and Ercilasun, Konuralp (eds), The Uyghur Community Diaspora, Identity and Geopolitics, pp. 85103. Dordrecht: Springer.Google Scholar
Brauer, E. 1942. ‘The Jews of Afghanistan: An Anthropological Report’. Jewish Social Studies 4(2): 121–38.Google Scholar
Bray, Francesca. et al. 2015. Rice: Global Networks and New Histories. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bregel, Yuri. 2009. ‘Uzbeks, Qazaks and Turkmens’. In Cosmo, Nicola Di, Frank, Allen J. and Golden, Peter B. (eds), The Cambridge History of Inner Asia: The Chingissid Age, pp. 221–36. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Brubaker, Rogers. 2005. ‘The “Diaspora’s Diaspora”’. Ethnic and Racial Studies 28: 119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bulag, Uradyn. 2014. ‘A World Community of Neighbours in the Making: Resource Cosmopolitics and Mongolia’s “Third Neighbour” Diplomacy’. In Zhang, Juan and Saxer, Martin (eds), The Art of Neighbouring: Making Relations across China’s Borders, pp. 1113. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.Google Scholar
Bunnell, Tim. 2016. From the World City to the World in One City: Liverpool through Malay Lives. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
Burton, Audrey. 1993. Bukharan Trade, 1558–1718. Bloomington: Indiana University Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies.Google Scholar
Can, Lâle. 2020. Subjects: Central Asian Pilgrims and the Ottoman Hajj and the End of Empire. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Can, Lâle 2016. ‘The Protection Question: Central Asians and Extraterritoriality in the Late Ottoman Empire’. International Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 48: 669–99.Google Scholar
Can, Lâle. 2012. ‘Connecting People: A Central Asian Sufi Network in Turn-of-the-Century Istanbul’. Modern Asian Studies 46: 373401.Google Scholar
Candea, Mattei. 2013. ‘The Fieldsite as Device’. Journal of Cultural Economy 6(3): 241–58.Google Scholar
Candea, Mattei. 2007. ‘Arbitrary Locations: In Defence of the Bounded Field-Site’. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 13: 167–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carey, Matthew. 2017. Mistrust: An Ethnographic Theory. Chicago: Chicago University Press.Google Scholar
Caron, James. 2018. ‘Pashto Border Literature as Geopolitical Knowledge’. Geopolitics 24(2): 444–61.Google Scholar
Carrier, Neil. 2016. Little Mogadishu: Eastleigh, Nairobi’s Global Somali Hub. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Cesarani, David. 1998. ‘A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Suburbs: Social Change in Anglo-Jewry between the Wars, 1914–1945’. Jewish Culture and History 1(1): 526.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chaudhury, Nafay. ‘Exchanging Laws: The Interplay of State and Nonstate Legal Systems in Afghanistan’s Premier Money Bazaar’. Unpublished PhD Dissertation, London: King’s College, University of London.Google Scholar
Chaudhury, Nafay Forthcoming. ‘Legal Transformation of Nonstate Law: Order and Conflict in Afghanistan’s Premier Money Bazaar’. Law and Social Inquiry.Google Scholar
Chaudhury, Nafay 2020. ‘The Regulation of Informal Trade Credit (Ograyi) in Afghanistan’. Asian Journal of Law and Society 7(3).Google Scholar
Cheuk, Ka-Kin. 2016. ‘Diplomacy among Indian Traders in a Chinese Fabric Market’. The Cambridge Journal of Anthropology 34(2): 4258.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cheuk, Ka-Kin 2015. ‘Global Fabric Bazaar: An Indian Trading Economy in a Chinese County’. Phil. Dissertation, University of Oxford.Google Scholar
Clarke, M. E. 2017. ‘The Belt and Road Initiative: China’s New Grand Strategy?’. Asia Policy 24(July): 715.Google Scholar
Curtin, Philip. 1984. Cross-Cultural Trade in World History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Christelow, Allan. 2012. Algerians without Borders: The Making of a Global Frontier Society. Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cho, L. 2010. Eating Chinese: Culture on the Menu in Small Town Canada. Toronto: Toronto University Press.Google Scholar
Chu, Nellie. 2019. ‘Jiagongchang Household Workshops as Marginal Hubs of Women’s Subcontracted Labour in Guangzhou, China’. Modern Asian Studies 53(3): 800–21.Google Scholar
Chubin, Shahram and Tripp, Charles. 2014. Iran–Saudi Arabia Relations and Regional Order. Abingdon: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Claassen, Rutger. 2018. Capabilities in a Just Society: A Theory of Navigational Agency. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Coburn, Noah. 2016. Losing Afghanistan: An Obituary for the Intervention. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Coburn, Noah. 2011. Bazaar Politics: Power and Pottery in an Afghan Market Town. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Cohen, Abner. 1971. ‘Cultural Strategies in the Organisation of Trading Diasporas’. In Meillassoux, C. (ed.), The Development of Indigenous Trade and Markets in West Africa: Studies Presented and Discussed at the tenth International Africa Seminar at Fourah Bay College, Freetown, December, 1969, pp. 266–81. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Cohen, Abner. 1969. Custom and Politics in Urban Africa: A Study of Hausa Migrants in Yoruba Towns. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Cole, Juan R. 2002. ‘Iranian Culture and South Asia, 1500–1900’. In Keddie, N. and Matthee, R. (eds), Iran and the Surrounding World: Interactions in Culture and Cultural Politics, pp. 1535. Seattle: University of Washington Press.Google Scholar
Cook, Joanna, Laidlaw, James and Mair, Jonathan. 2009. ‘What If There Is No Elephant? Towards a Conception of an Un-sited Field’. In Falzon, Mark-Anthony (ed.), Multi-sited Ethnography: Theory, Praxis, and Locality in Contemporary Social Research, pp. 4772. London: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Cooper, Alanna E. 2012. Bukharan Jews and the Dynamics of Global Judaism. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Cooper, Julian. 2013. ‘Russia and the Eurasian Customs Union’. In Dragneva, Rilka and Kataryna, (eds), Eurasian Economic Integration, pp. 8199. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing.Google Scholar
Cordell, Lilian. 2018. Miriam’s Table: The Bukharian Cookbook. London: n.p.Google Scholar
Crews, Robert. 2015. Afghan Modern: The History of a Global Nation. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Crews, Robert 2007. For Prophet and Tsar: Islam and Empire in Russia and Central Asia. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Crews, Robert and Tarzi, Amin. 2009. The Taliban and the Crisis of Afghanistan. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Da Col, Giovanni. ‘The View from Somewhen: Events, Bodies and the Perspective of Fortune around Khawa Karpo, a Tibetan Sacred Mountain in Yunnan Province’. Inner Asia 9(2): 215–35.Google Scholar
Dagyeli, Jeanine. 2017. ‘Weapon of the Discontented? Trans-river Migration as Tax Avoidance Practice and Lever in Eastern Bukhara’. The Journal of Transcultural Studies 18(2): 169–96.Google Scholar
Dalakoglou, Dimitris. 2010. ‘Migrating‐Remitting‐“Building”‐Dwelling: House‐Making as “Proxy” Presence in Postsocialist Albania’. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 16(4): 761–77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dale, Stephen 2002. Indian Merchants and Eurasian Trade, 1600–1750. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Dale, Stephen. 1995. Hindu Merchants and Eurasian Trade, 1600–1750. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Daniels, Rorry. 2013. ‘Strategic Competition in South Asia: Gwadar, Chabahar, and the Risks of Infrastructure Development’. Journal of the National Committee on American Foreign Policy 35(2): 93100.Google Scholar
De Goede, Marieke. 2003. ‘Hawala Discourses and the War on Terrorist Finance’. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 21(5): 513–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Regt, Marina and Tafesse, Medareshaw. 2015. ‘Deported before Experiencing the Good Sides of Migration: Ethiopians Returning from Saudi Arabia’. African and Black Diaspora: An International Journal 9(2): 228–42.Google Scholar
Deeb, Lara and Harb, Mona. 2014. Leisurely Islam: Negotiating Morality and Geography in Shi’ite South Lebanon. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Dossa, Parin. 2014. Afghanistan Remembers: Gendered Narrations of Violence and Culinary Practices. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Drephal, Maximillian. 2019. Afghanistan and the Coloniality of Diplomacy: The British Legation in Kabul, 1922–1948. Dordrecht: Springer.Google Scholar
Dresch, Paul. 1990. Tribes, Government and History in Yemen. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Eaton, Richard. 2019. India in the Persianate Age, 1000–1765. London: Allen Lane.Google Scholar
Edgar, Adrienne. 2006. Tribal Nation: The Making of Soviet Turkmenistan. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Eden, Jeff. 2018. Slavery and Empire in Central Asia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Edwards, David. 1996. Heroes of the Age: Moral Faultlines on the Afghan Frontier. Berkeley: California University Press.Google Scholar
Eickelman, Dale. 1974. ‘Is There an Islamic City? The Making of a Quarter in a Moroccan Town’. International Journal of Middle East Studies 5(3): 274–94.Google Scholar
Erie, Mathew. 2016. ‘Shariʿa, Charity, and Minjian Autonomy in Muslim China: Gift-Giving in a Plural World’. American Ethnologist 43(2): 311–24.Google Scholar
Evans Pritchard, Edward Evan. 2013. The Nuer: A Description of the Modes of Livelihood and Political Institutions of a Nilotic People. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Evans Pritchard, Edward Evan 1937. Witchcraft, Oracles and Magic among the Azande. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Fallon, T. 2015. ‘The New Silk Road: Xi Jinping’s Grand Strategy for Eurasia’. American Foreign Policy Interests 37(3): 140–47.Google Scholar
Fargues, Philippe. 2011. ‘Immigration without Inclusion: Non-nationals in Nation-Building in the Gulf States’. Asia and Pacific Migration Journal 20(3–4): 273–92.Google Scholar
Fausto, Carols. 2007. ‘Feasting on People: Cannibalism and Commensality in Amazonia’. Current Anthropology 28(4): 497530.Google Scholar
Fauzia, A., Mostowlansky, T. and Yahaya, N.. 2018. ‘Muslim Endowments in Asia: Waqf, Charity and Circulations’. The Muslim World 108(4): 587–92.Google Scholar
Fehlings, S. and Karrar, H.. 2020. ‘Negotiating State and Society: The Normative Informal Economies of Central Asia and the Caucasus’. Central Asian Survey 39(1): 110.Google Scholar
Ferdinand, P. 2016. ‘Westward Ho: The China Dream and “One Belt, One Road”: Chinese Foreign Policy under Xi Jinping’. International Affairs 92(4): 941–57.Google Scholar
Flanagan, Stephen J. 2013. ‘The Turkey–Russia–Iran Nexus: Eurasian Power Dynamics’. Washington Quarterly 36(1): 163–78.Google Scholar
Fletcher, Joseph. 1995. ‘Integrative History: Parallels and Interconnections in the Early Modern Period’. In Manz, Beatrice Forbes (ed.), Studies on Chinese and Islamic Asia, pp. 135. London: Variorum.Google Scholar
Frankopan, Peter. 2018. The New Silk Roads: The Present and Future of the World. Bloomsbury: London.Google Scholar
Frankopan, Peter 2015. The Silk Roads: A History of the World. Bloomsbury: London.Google Scholar
Freitag, Ulrike. 2020. A History of Jeddah: The Gate to Mecca in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Friedman, Brandon. 2019. ‘Insight 201: The Northern Tier and Great Power Competition in West Asia’. Singapore: NUS Middle East Insights. https://mei.nus.edu.sg/publication/insight-201-the-northern-tier-and-great-power-competition-in-west-asia/.Google Scholar
Freitag, U. and von Oppen, A.. 2010. ‘Introduction: Translocality, an Approach to Connection and Transfer in Area Studies’. In Freitag, U. and von Oppen, A. (eds), Translocality: The Study of Globalizing Processes from a Southern Perspective, pp. 124. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Fry, Maxwell J. 1974. The Afghan Economy: Money, Finance, and the Critical Constraints to Economic Development. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Fuoli, Francesca. 2017. ‘Colonialism and State-Building in Afghanistan: Anglo-Afghan Cooperation in the Institutionalisation of Ethnic Difference, 1869–1900’. PhD Dissertation, SOAS, University of London.Google Scholar
Gardner, Andrew. 2008. ‘Strategic Transnationalism: The Indian Diasporic Elite in Contemporary Bahrain’. City and Society 20(1): 5478.Google Scholar
Geertz, Clifford. 1978. ‘The Bazaar Economy: Information and Search in Peasant Marketing’. American Economic Review 68(2): 2832.Google Scholar
Genina, Anna. 2016. ‘Claiming Ancestral Homelandsː Mongolian Kazakh Migration in Inner Asia’. PhD Dissertation, University of Michigan.Google Scholar
Gilroy, Paul. 2004. Postcolonial Melancholia after Empire: Multiculture or Postcolonial Melancholia. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Giersch, C. Patterson. 2010. ‘Across Zomia with Merchants, Monks, and Musk: Process Geographies, Trade Networks, and the Inner East–Southeast Asian Borderlands’. Journal of Global History 5(2): 215–39.Google Scholar
Giustozzi, Antonio. 2018. The Islamic State in Khorasan: Afghanistan, Pakistan and the New Central Asian Jihad. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Giustozzi, Antonio. 2009. Empires of Mud: Wars and Warlords in Afghanistan. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Gladney, D. 1994. ‘Sino-Middle Eastern Perspectives since the Gulf War: Views from Below’. International Journal of Middle East Studies 29(4): 677–91.Google Scholar
Goody, Jack. 1982. Cooking, Cuisine and Class: A Study in Comparative Sociology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Goody, Jack 1998. Food and Love: A Cultural History of East and West. London: Verso.Google Scholar
Green, Nile. 2020. Global Islam: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Green, Nile 2019. ‘Introduction: The Frontiers of the Persian World (ca. 800 – 1900)’. In Green, Nile (ed.), The Persianate World: The Frontiers of a Eurasian Lingua Franca. Berkeley: California University Press.Google Scholar
Green, Nile 2018. ‘What Is “Global Islam”? Definitions for a Field of Inquiry’. Diogenes 256(4): 165–81.Google Scholar
Green, Nile. 2017. Afghanistan’s Islam: From Conversion to the Taliban. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Green, Nile 2016. ‘The Demographics of Dystopia: The Muslim City in Asia’s Future’. History and Anthropology 27(3): 273–95.Google Scholar
Green, Nile 2014. Terrains of Exchange: Religious Economies of Global Islam. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Green, Nile 2011. Bombay Islam: The Religious Economy of the West Indian Ocean, 1840–1915. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Green, Nile 2010. ‘The Uses of Books in a Late Mughal Takiyya: Persianate Knowledge between Person and Paper’. Modern Asian Studies 44(2): 241–65.Google Scholar
The Guardian. 2009. ‘Hamid Karzai: Too Nice, Too Weak; How West’s Own Man Fell Out of Favour’. Monday, 23 March. www.theguardian.com/world/2009/mar/23/hamid-karzai-afghanistan.Google Scholar
Gualtieri, Sarah. 2020. Arab Routes: Pathways to Syrian California. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Gvion, Liora. 2014. Beyond Hummus and Falafel: Social and Political Aspects of Palestinian Food in Israel. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Farquhar, Michael. 2015. ‘Saudi Petrodollars, Spiritual Capital, and the Islamic University of Medina: A Wahhabi Missionary Project in Transnational Perspective’. International Journal of Middle East Studies 47(4): 701–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hakimi, Aziz. 2020. ‘“Good Men Don’t Elope”: Afghan Migrant Men’s Discourses on Labour Migration, Marriage and Masculinity’. History and Anthropology. DOI: 10.1080/02757206.2020.1865342.Google Scholar
Halliday, Fred. 1992. ‘The Millet of Manchester: Arab Merchants and Cotton Trade’. British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 19(1): 159–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hamidi, Mohsen. 2019. ‘The Two Faces of the Fatemiyun (I): Revisiting the Male Fighters’. Afghanistan Analysts Network. www.afghanistan-analysts.org/the-two-faces-of-the-fatemiyun-i-revisiting-the-male-fighters/.Google Scholar
Hanifi, Shah Mahmoud. (ed.). 2019. Elphinstone in South Asia: Pioneer of British Colonial Rule. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Hanifi, Shah Mahmoud. 2012. Connecting Histories in Afghanistan: Market Relations and State Formation on a Colonial Frontier. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Hann, Chris. 2016. ‘A Concept of Eurasia’. Current Anthropology 57(1): 127.Google Scholar
Hann, Chris 2015. ‘Goody, Polanyi and Eurasia: An Unfinished Project in Comparative Historical Economic Anthropology’. History and Anthropology 26(3): 308–20.Google Scholar
Harris, Rachel and Kamalov, Ablet. 2020. ‘Nation, Religion, and Social Heat: Heritaging Uyghur Mäshräp in Kazakhstan’. Central Asian Survey.Google Scholar
Harper, Tim and Amrith, Sunil. 2012. ‘Sites of Asian Interaction: An Introduction’. Modern Asian Studies 2(46): 249–57.Google Scholar
Hann, Chris and Hart, Keith. 2011. Economic Anthropology: History, Ethnography, Critique. Cambridge: Polity Press.Google Scholar
Hassan, Arif. 1987. ‘Karachi Riots of December 1986: Crisis of State and Civil Society in Pakistan’. Economic and Political Weekly 22(11).Google Scholar
Henig, David. 2019. ‘Economic Theologies of Abundance: Halal Exchange and the Limits of Neoliberal Effects in Post-war Bosnia–Herzegovina’. Ethnos 84(2): 223–40.Google Scholar
Henig, David 2016. ‘Hospitality as Diplomacy in Post-cosmopolitan Urban Spaces: Dervish Lodges and Sofra-Diplomacy in Post-war Bosnia–Herzegovina’. Journal of Cambridge Anthropology 34(2): 7692.Google Scholar
Henig, David and Makovicky, Nicolette. 2016. ‘Introduction: Re-imagining Economies after Socialism; Ethics, Favours, and Moral Sentiments’. In Henig, D. and Makovicky, N. (eds), Economies of Favour after Socialism, pp. 120. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Herzfeld, Michael. 2002. ‘The Absence Presence: Discourses of Crypto-Colonialism’. South Atlantic Quarterly 101(4): 899926.Google Scholar
Ho, Engseng. 2017. ‘Inter-Asian Concepts for Mobile Societies’. Journal of Asian Studies 76(9): 907–28.Google Scholar
Ho, Engseng. 2014. ‘Afterword: Mobile Law and Thick Transregionalism’. Law and History Review 32(4): 883–89.Google Scholar
Ho, Engseng 2006. Graves of Tarim: Genealogy and Mobility across the Indian Ocean. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Ho, Engseng 2002. ‘Before Parochialization: Diasproric Arabs Case in Creole Waters’. In Huub, De Jonge and Kapteinm, Nico (eds), Transcending Borders: Arabs, Politics, Trade and Islam in Southeast Asia, pp. 1135. Leiden: KITLV Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hodgson, Marshall. 1997. The Venture of Islam: The Expansion of Islam in the Middle Periods; Conscience and History in a World Civilisation. Chicago: Chicago University Press.Google Scholar
Hodgson, Marshall. 1963. ‘The Interrelations of Society in History’. Comparative Studies in Society and History 5(2): 227–50.Google Scholar
Holbraad, Martin. 2009. ‘Definitive Evidence, from Cuban Gods’. In Engelke, Matthew (ed.), The Objects of Evidence: Anthropological Approaches to the Production of Knowledge, pp. 89104. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.Google Scholar
Hopkins, Benjamin D. 2020. Ruling the Savage Periphery: Frontier Governance and the Making of the Modern State. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Hopkins, Benjamin D. 2009. The Making of Modern Afghanistan. London: Palgrave.Google Scholar
Huat, Chua Beng et al. 2019. ‘Area Studies and the Crisis of Legitimacy: A View from South East Asia’. Southeast Asia Research 27(1): 3148.Google Scholar
Humphrey, Caroline. 2018. Trust and Mistrust in the Economies of the China-Russia Borderlands. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.Google Scholar
Humphrey, Caroline 2016. ‘A New Look at Favours: The Case of Post-socialist Higher Education’. In Henig, D. and Makovicky, N. (eds), Economies of Favour after Socialism, pp. 5072. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Humphrey, Caroline. 2016. ‘Introduction: Trusting and Mistrusting across Borders’. In Humphrey, Caroline (ed.), Trust and Mistrust in the Economies of the China–Russia Borderlands, pp. 936. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.Google Scholar
Humphrey, Caroline 2002. The Unmaking of Soviet Life: Everyday Economies after Socialism. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Humphrey, Caroline, Skvirskaja, Vera and Marsden, Magnus. 2009. ‘Cosmopolitanism and the City: Interaction and Coexistence in Bukhara, Uzbekistan’. In Maryam, S. (ed.), The Other Global City, pp. 202–31. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Humphrey, Caroline and Skvirskaja, Vera. 2012. ‘Introduction’. In Humphrey, Caroline and Skvirskaja, Vera (eds), Explorations of the Post-cosmopolitan City, pp. 116. New York: Berghahn Books.Google Scholar
Ibañez-Tirado, Diana. 2019. ‘West-Central Asia: A Comparative Analysis of Students’ Trajectories in Russia (Moscow) from the 1980s and China (Yiwu) from the 2000s’. Journal of Eurasian Studies 10(1): 4860.Google Scholar
Ibañez-Tirado, Diana 2018b. ‘Potentiality, Somewhen and Everywhere: An Afghan/Turkmen Family in Istanbul’. Paper presented at Association of American Anthropologists meeting in the roundtable, ‘Imagining Immigrant Futures: Potentiality in Immigration Studies’.Google Scholar
Ibañez-Tirado, Diana. 2018a. ‘Hierarchies of Trade in Yiwu and Dushanbe: The Case of an Uzbek Merchant Family from Tajikistan’. History and Anthropology 29, S1: 3147.Google Scholar
Ibañez-Tirado, Diana 2013. ‘Temporality and Subjectivity in Kulob, Southern Tajikistan: An Ethnography of Ordinary People and Their Everyday Lives’. PhD Dissertation, SOAS, University of London.Google Scholar
Ibañez Tirado, Diana and Marsden, Magnus. 2020. ‘Trade beyond the Law’. Central Asian Survey 39(1): 135–54.Google Scholar
Ibrahimi, Niamatullah. 2017. The Hazaras and the Afghan State: Rebelllion, Exclusion and the Struggle for Recognition. London: Hurst & Company.Google Scholar
Ibnu, Ireena. 2019. ‘Malaysian Muslim Students’ Experiences in the United Kingdom: Piety and Everyday Life in Manchester and Cardiff’. PhD Dissertation, University of Sussex.Google Scholar
Jeong, Hyeju Janice. 2019. ‘Shanghai and Mecca: Diaspora and Diplomacy of Chinese Muslims in the Twentieth Century’. PhD Dissertation, Durham, NC: Duke University.Google Scholar
Jaffrelot, Christophe and Louer, Laurence. 2017. Pan-Islamic Connections: Transnational Networks between South Asia and the Gulf. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Jalallar, Mohammad Khan. 2011. Rumi-Tomato: Autobiography of an Afghan Minister. N.p. [United States]: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform.Google Scholar
Jawad, Said Tayyeb. 2019. Nnash Dehaid ve Eymanash Maporsaid: Chand Justar-e dar Gostere-ye Adab Tarikh ve Tassawuf (Be a provider of relief, not an inquisitor of belief: Essays on ethics, history and Sufism). Kabul: Amiri Publications.Google Scholar
Jansen, Stef. 2009. ‘After the Red Passport: Towards an Anthropology of the Everyday Geopolitics of Entrapment in the EU’s “Immediate Outside”’. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 15(4): 815–32.Google Scholar
Kalynovsky, A. 2013. ‘Not Some British Colony in Africa: The Politics of Decolonization and Modernization in Soviet Central Asia 1955–1964’. Ab Imperio 2: 191222.Google Scholar
Kane, Eileen. 2015. Russian Hajj: Empire and the Pilgrimage in Mecca. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Karar, Hasan. 2013. ‘Merchants, Market and the State’. Critical Asian Studies 45(3): 459–80.Google Scholar
Karimi, Ali. 2020. ‘The Bazaar, the State, and the Struggle for Public Opinion in Nineteenth-Century Afghanistan.’ Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 30(4): 613–33.Google Scholar
Kerner, Sussane, Chou, Cynthia and Warmind, Morten. 2015. Commensality: From Everyday Food to Feast. London: Bloomington.Google Scholar
Kerr, Simione. 2016. ‘Saudi Arabia Considers Income Tax for Foreign Residents’. Financial Times, 8 June.Google Scholar
Khalid, Adeeb. 2007. Islam after Communism: Religion and Politics in Central Asia. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Khazeni, Arash. 2014. Sky Blue Stone: The Turquoise Trade in World History. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Kia, Mana. 2020. Persianate Selves: Memories of Place and Origin before Nationalism. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
King, Charles and Melvin, Neil (eds). 1999. Nations Abroad: Diaspora Politics and International Relations in the Former Soviet Union. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Kirasirova, Masha. 2011. ‘“Sons of Muslims” in Moscow: Soviet Central Asian Mediators to the Foreign East, 1955–1962’. Ab Imperio 4: 106–32.Google Scholar
Klein, Jacob and Murcott, Anne (eds). 2014. Food Consumption in Global Perspective: Essays in the Anthropology of Food in Honour of Jack Goody. London: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Koinova, Maria. 2017. ‘Beyond Statist Paradigms: Sociospatial Positionality and Diaspora Mobilization in International Relations’. International Studies Review 19(4): 597621.Google Scholar
Koplik, Sara. 2015. A Political and Economic History of the Jews of Afghanistan. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Kreutzmann, Hermann. 2015. Pamirian Crossroads: Kirghiz and Wakhi of High Asia. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag.Google Scholar
Kuşçu, I. 2013. ‘Ethnic Return Migration and Public Debate: The Case of Kazakhstan’. International Migration 52(2): 178–97.Google Scholar
Kwon, Heonik. 2020. After the Korean War: An Intimate History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Kwon, Heonik 2013. ‘Legacies of the Korean War: Transforming Ancestral Rituals in South Korea’. Memory Studies 6(2): 161–73.Google Scholar
Kwon, Heonik 2010. The Other Cold War. New York: Columbia University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Landau, Jacob M. 1995. Pan-Turkism: From Irredentism to Cooperation. 2nd ed. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Lee, Jonathan. 1996. The ‘Ancient Supremacy’: Bukhara, Afghanistan and the Battle for Balkh, 1731–1901. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Leyshon, Andrew, Lee, Roger and Williams, Colin C.. 2003. Alternative Economic Spaces. London: Sage.Google Scholar
Loy, Thomas. 2016. Bukharan Jews in the Soviet Union: Autobiographical Narrations of Mobility, Continuity and Change. Wiesbaden: Ludwig Reichert Verlag.Google Scholar
Lambourn, E. 2018. Abraham’s Luggage: A Social Life of Things in the Medieval Indian Ocean World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lawrence, Bruce. 2012. ‘Muslim Cosmopolitanism’. Critical Muslim 2.Google Scholar
Lee, Jennifer. 2009. The Fortune Cookie Chronicles: Adventures in the World of Chinese Food. New York: Ten Press.Google Scholar
Lee, Jonathan. 2002. ‘The Armenians of Kabul and Afghanistan’. In Ball, Wawrick and Harrow, Leonard (eds), Cairo to Kabul: Afghan and Islamic Studies presented to Ralph Pinder-Wilson, pp. 157–62. London: Melisende.Google Scholar
Levi, Scott C. 2020. Bukharan Crisis: A Connected History of 18th-Century Central Asia. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press.Google Scholar
Levi, Scott C. 2017. The Rise and Fall of Khoqand, 1709–1876: Central Asia in the Global Age. Pittsburgh, PA: Pittsburgh University Press.Google Scholar
Levi, Scott C. 2002. The Indian Diaspora in Central Asia and Its Trade. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Li, Darryl. 2020. The Universal Enemy: Jihad, Empire and the Challenge of Solidarity. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Lin, C. 2016. ‘A New Eurasian Embrace: Turkey Pivots East While China Marches West’. In Horesh, Niv (ed.), Toward Well-Oiled Relations? China’s Presence in the Middle East following the Arab Spring, pp. 3047. London: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Longva, Anh Nga. 1997. Walls Built on Sand: Migration: Exclusion, and Society in Kuwait. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.Google Scholar
Low, Kelvin. 2019. ‘Theorising Sensory Cultures in Asia: Sociohistorical Perspectives’. Asian Studies Review 43(4): 618–36.Google Scholar
Lutfi, Ameem. 2018. ‘Conquest without Rule: Baloch Portfolio Mercenaries in the Indian Ocean’. PhD Dissertation, Durham, NC: Duke University.Google Scholar
Mahmood, Saba. 2013. Religious Difference in a Secular Age: Minority Report. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Main, Daniel. 2011. ‘Neoliberal Times: Progress, Boredom, and Shame among Young Men in Urban Ethiopia’. American Ethnologist 34(4): 659–73.Google Scholar
Makdisi, Ussama. 2019. Age of Coexistence: The Ecumenical Frame and the Making of the Modern Arab World. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Malinowski, Bronislaw. 1992. Argonauts of the Western Pacific: An Account of Native Enterprise and Adventure in the Archipelagoes of Melanesian New Guinea. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Malkki, Lisa. 1995. ‘Refugees and Exile: From “Refugee Studies” to the National Order of Things’. Annual Review of Anthropology 24: 495523.Google Scholar
Manchester Evening News. 2017. ‘How Did Strangeways Become the Counterfeit Capital of the UK?’. 19 November.Google Scholar
Mandal, Sumit. 2018. Arab: Creole Histories and Modern Identity in the Malay World, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Marchand, Trevor. 2001. Minaret Building and Apprenticeship in Yemen. Richmond: Curzon.Google Scholar
Marcus, George. 1998. Paranoia within Reason: A Casebook on Conspiracy as Explanation. Chicago: Chicago University Press.Google Scholar
Marcus, George. 1995. ‘Ethnography in/of the World System: The Emergence of Multi-sited Ethnography’. Annual Review of Anthropology 24: 95117.Google Scholar
Markovits, Claude. 2000. The Global World of Indian Merchants, 1750–1947. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Marouda, Marina. 2020. ‘A Tale of Three Market-Places: Chinese Commodities, European Fairs, Vietnamese Entrepreneurs’. Global Networks 20(4): 725–45.Google Scholar
Marsden, Magnus. 2020b. ‘The Alternative Histories of Muslim Asia’s Urban Centres: De-cosmopolitanisation and Beyond’. Copenhagen Journal of Asian Studies 38: 831.Google Scholar
Marsden, Magnus 2020a. ‘Commodities, Merchants, and Refugees: Inter-Asian Circulations and Afghan Mobility’. Global Networks 20(4): 746–65.Google Scholar
Marsden, Magnus 2018. ‘Islamic Cosmopolitanism Out of Muslim Asia: Hindu–Muslim Business Co-operation Between Odessa and Yiwu’. History and Anthropology 29(1): 121–39.Google Scholar
Marsden, Magnus 2016. Trading Worlds: Afghan Merchants across Modern Frontiers. London/New York: Hurst/Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Marsden, Magnus 2015. ‘Crossing Eurasia: Trans-regional Afghan Trading Networks in China and Beyond’. Central Asian Survey 35(1): 115.Google Scholar
Marsden, Magnus 2005. Living Islam: Muslim Religious Experience in North-West Pakistan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Marsden, Magnus and Hopkins, Benjamin D.. 2019. ‘Afghan Trading Networks’. In Ludden, David (ed.), Oxford Research Encyclopaedia in Asian History. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Marsden, Magnus and Hopkins, Benjamin D. 2012. Fragments of the Afghan Frontier. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Marsden, Magnus and Ibañez Tirado, Diana. 2018. ‘Afghanistan’s Cosmopolitan Trading Networks: A View from Yiwu, China’. In Michael Feener, R. and Gedacht, Joshua (eds), Challenging Cosmopolitanism: Coercion, Mobility and Displacement in Islamic Asia, pp. 225–50. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.Google Scholar
Marsden, Magnus and Ibañez Tirado, Diana 2015. ‘Repertoires of Family Life and the Anchoring of Afghan Trading Networks in Ukraine’. History and Anthropology 26(2): 145–64.Google Scholar
Marsden, Magnus, Ibañez-Tirado, Diana and Henig, David. 2016. ‘Everyday Diplomacy: Introduction to Special Issue’. Cambridge Journal of Anthropology 34(2): 222.Google Scholar
Marsden, Magnus and Mostowlansky, Till. 2019. ‘Whither West Asia? Exploring North–South Perspectives on Eurasia’. Journal of Eurasian Studies 10(1): 310.Google Scholar
Marsden, Magnus and Reeves, Madeleine. 2018. ‘Marginal Hubs: On Conviviality beyond the Urban in Asia’. Modern Asian Studies 53(3): 755–75.Google Scholar
Maley, William (ed.). 1997. Fundamentalism Reborn? Afghanistan and the Taliban. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Mathew, Johan. 2019. ‘On Principles and Agency: Reassembling Trust in Indian Ocean Commerce’. Comparative Studies of Society and History 61(2): 242–68.Google Scholar
Matthews, Gordon, Lin, Linessa Dan and Yang, Yang. 2018. The World in Guangzhou: Africans and Other Foreigners in South China’s Global Marketplace. Chicago: Chicago University Press.Google Scholar
Mathews, Gordon, Ribeiro, G. Lins and Alba, C. (eds). 2012. Globalization from Below: The World’s Other Economy. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
McDougall, James. 2012. ‘Frontiers, Borderlands and Saharan/World History’. In McDougal, James and Scheele, Judith (eds), Saharan Frontiers: Space and Mobility in World History, pp. 7392. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
McVeigh, Tracy. 2017. ‘Silk Road Route Back in Business as China Train Rolls into London’. The Observer, 14 January.Google Scholar
Megoran, Nick and Heathershaw, John. 2011. ‘Contesting Danger: A New Agenda for Policy and Scholarship on Central Asia’. International Affairs 87(3): 589612.Google Scholar
Megoran, Nick and Sharapova, Sevara (eds). 2014. Central Asia in International Relations: The Legacies of Halford Mackinder. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Mehrdad, Ezatullah. 2018. ‘Afghanistan’s Last Jew Fights to Keep His Home: The Country’s Sole Synagogue’. Times of Israel, 28 November.Google Scholar
Meyer, James H. 2014. Turks across Empires: Marketing Muslim Identity in the Russian–Ottoman Borderlands, 1856–1914. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Mojaddedi, Fatima. 2019. ‘The Closing: Heart, Mouth, Word’. Public Culture 31(3): 497520.Google Scholar
Monahan, Erica. 2015. The Merchants of Siberia: Trade in Early Modern Eurasia. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Monsutti, Alessandro. 2013. ‘Trust, Friendship and Transversal Ties of Cooperation among Afghans’. In Schetter, C. (ed.), Local Politics in Afghanistan: A Century of Intervention in the Social Order, pp. 147–62. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Monsutti, Alessandro 2010. ‘Food and Identity among Young Afghan Refugees and Migrants in Iran’. In Chatty, Dawn (ed.), Deterritorialized Youth: Sahrawi and Afghan Refugees at the Margins of the Middle East. New York: Berghahn.Google Scholar
Monsutti, Alessandro. 2004. ‘Cooperation, Remittances, and Kinship among the Hazaras’. Iranian Studies 37(2): 219–40.Google Scholar
Mostowlansky, Till and Karrar, Hasan. 2018. ‘Assembling Marginality in North Pakistan’. Political Geography 63: 6574.Google Scholar
Mukhopadhyay, Dipali. 2014. Warlords, Strongman Governors and State Building in Afghanistan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Morris, Jeremy. 2016. ‘Not Soft Power, But Speaking Softly: “Everyday Diplomacy” in Field Relations during the Russia–Ukraine Conflict’. Cambridge Anthropology 34(2): 110–26.Google Scholar
Nabhan, Gary Paul. 2014. Cumin, Camels and Caravans: A Spice Odyssey. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Narayan, Uma. 1995. ‘Eating Cultures: Incorporation, Identity and Indian Food’. Social Identities 1(1): 6386.Google Scholar
Nasiri, Afzal and Khalili, Marie. 2013. Memoirs of Khalilullah Khalili: An Afghan Philosopher Poet; A Conversation with His Daughter, Marie. Virginia: Afzal Nasiri and Marie Khalili Publishers.Google Scholar
Nissimi, Hilda. 2003. ‘Memory, Community, and the Mashhadi Jews during the Underground Period’. Jewish Social Studies 9(3): 76106.Google Scholar
Nesbitt, Mark, Simpson, St John and Svanberg, Invar. 2010. ‘History of Rice in Western and Central Asia’. In Sharma, S. D. (ed.), Rice: Origin, Antiquity and History, pp. 312–44. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press.Google Scholar
Nichols, Robert. 2008. A History of Pashtun Migration, 1775–2006. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Nikolotov, Anton. 2019. ‘Volatile Conviviality: Joking Relations in Moscow’s Marginal Marketplace’. Modern Asian Studies 53(3): 874903.Google Scholar
North, Douglass. 1992. ‘Institutions, Ideology, and Economic Performance’. Cato Journal 3(Winter): 477–96.Google Scholar
Nowicka, Magdalena. 2012. ‘Cosmopolitans, Spatial Mobility and the Alternative Geographies’. International Review of Social Research 2(3): 116.Google Scholar
Nunan, Timothy. 2016. Humanitarian Invasion: Global Developments in Cold War Afghanistan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
O’Halpin, Eunan. 2016. ‘The Fate of Indigenous and Soviet Central Asian Jews in Afghanistan, 1933–1951’. Holocaust and Genocide Studies 30(2): 298327.Google Scholar
Ong, Ahiwa. 1999. Flexible Citizenship: The Cultural Logics of Transnationality. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Ong, Ahiwa. 1996. ‘Cultural Citizenship as Subject-Making: Immigrants Negotiate Racial and Cultural Boundaries in the United States’. Cultural Anthropology 37(5): 737–62.Google Scholar
Osella, Filippo. Forthcoming. ‘The Unbearable Lightness of Trust’. Modern Asian Studies.Google Scholar
Osella, Filippo and Osella, Caroline. 2017. ‘“I Am Gulf”: The Production of Cosmopolitanism in Kozhikode, Kerala, India’. In Kresse, K. and Simpson, E. (eds), Struggling with History: Islam and Cosmopolitanism in the Western Indian Ocean, pp. 323–55. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Osella, Filippo and Osella, Caroline 2009. ‘Muslim Entrepreneurs in Public Life between India and the Gulf: Making Good and Doing Good’. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 15: S202S221.Google Scholar
Ozkan, Behlül. 2014. ‘Turkey, Davutoglu and the Idea of Pan-Islamism’. Survival 56(4): 119–14.Google Scholar
Pelkmans, Mathijs and Machold, Rhys. 2011. ‘Conspiracy Theories and Their Truth Trajectories’. Focaal: Journal of Global and Historical Anthropology 59: 6680.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perry, Charles. 1996. ‘The Horseback Kitchen of Central Asia’. In Walker, Harlan (ed.), Food on the Move: Proceedings of the Oxford Symposium of Food and Cooking, pp. 243–48. Totness: Prospect Books.Google Scholar
Peyrouse, Sebastien and Raballand, Gael. 2015. ‘Central Asia: The New Silk Road Initiative’s Questionable Economic Rationality’. Eurasian Geography and Economics 56(4): 405–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pickett, James. 2020. Polymaths of Islam, Power and Networks of Knowledge in Central Asia. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Pickett, James 2015. ‘Soviet Civilization through a Persian Lens: Iranian Intellectuals, Cultural Diplomacy and Socialist Modernity 1941–1955’. Iranian Studies 48(5): 805–26.Google Scholar
Pickett, James. 2013. ‘Bukhara and the Muslims of Russia: Sufism, Education, and the Paradox of Islamic Prestige’. Central Asian Survey 32(4): 557–59.Google Scholar
Pliez, Oliver. 2015. ‘Yiwu: The Muslim World’s Chinese Wholesale Supermarket’. In Mörtenböck, Peter and Mooshammer, Helge (eds), Informal Market Worlds Atlas: The Architecture of Economic Pressure, pp. 3643. Rotterdam: NAI010 Publishers.Google Scholar
Ploberger, C. 2017. ‘One Belt, One Road: China’s New Grand Strategy’. Journal of Chinese Economic and Business Studies 15(3): 289305.Google Scholar
Rahimi, Haroun. 2019. ‘To Sue or Not to Sue: How Afghan Merchants Strategically Choose to Use or Avoid Courts’. Asian Journal of Comparative Law 14(2): 134.Google Scholar
Rasuly-Paleczek, G. 1998. ‘Ethnic Identity versus Nationalism: The Uzbeks of North-Eastern Afghanistan and the Afghan State’. In Atabaki, Touraj and O’Kane, John (eds), Post-Soviet Central Asia, pp. 204–30. London: I. B. Tauris & Co.Google Scholar
Raviv, Yael. 2015. Falafel Nation: Cuisine and the Making of National Identity in Israel. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press.Google Scholar
Ray, Krishnendu. 2016. The Ethnic Restaurateur. London: Bloomsbury.Google Scholar
Reeves, Madeleine. 2016. ‘Diplomat, Landlord, Con-artist, Thief: Housing Brokers and the Mediation of Risk in Migrant Moscow’. The Cambridge Journal of Anthropology 34(2): 93109.Google Scholar
Reeves, Madeleine. 2013. ‘Clean Fake: Authenticating Documents and Persons in Migrant Moscow’. American Ethnologist 40(3): 508–24.Google Scholar
Reuters. 2016. ‘Kiev Struggles in Broadcast War against Separatists as Tensions Rise’. 16 August. http://news.trust.org/item/20160816155924-6kcsl/.Google Scholar
Rippa, Alessandro and Saxer, Martin. 2019. ‘Cross-Border Trade and “the Market” between Xinjiang (China) and Pakistan’. Journal of Contemporary Asia 49: 254–71.Google Scholar
Rippa, Alessandro and Saxer, Martin 2016. ‘Mong La: Business as Usual in the China–Myanmar Borderlands’. Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review 19: 240–52.Google Scholar
Rimpiläinen, Emma. 2017. ‘Victims to Villains: Internal Displacement and Nation-Building in Ukraine’. Working Paper no. 76, Update, University of Tartu.Google Scholar
Robert, N. 2020. Fruit from the Sands: The Silk road Origins of the Food We Eat. Oakland: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Rolland, N. 2017b. China’s Eurasian Century? Political and Strategic Implications of the Belt and Road Initiative. Seattle, WA: National Bureau of Asian Research.Google Scholar
Rolland, N. 2017a. ‘China’s “Belt and Road Initiative”: Underwhelming or Game-Changer?The Washington Quarterly 40(1): 127–42.Google Scholar
Rosen, Lawrence, Geertz, Hilda and Geertz, Clifford. 1979. Meaning and Order in Moroccan Society. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Roth, Andrew. 2018. ‘Russia Hosts Talks between Taliban and Afghan Peace Council’. The Guardian, 9 November.Google Scholar
Rubin, Barnett R. 2014. ‘Crafting a Constitution for Afghanistan’. Journal of Democracy 15(3): 519.Google Scholar
Rui, Huaichuan. 2018. ‘Yiwu: Historical Transformation and Contributing Factors’. History and Anthropology 18: 1430.Google Scholar
Saberi, Helen. 1997. ‘Travel and Food in Afghanistan’. In Walker, Harlan (ed.), Food on the Move: Proceedings of the Oxford Symposium of Food and Cooking, pp. 265–73. Totness: Prospect Books.Google Scholar
Saberi, Helen. 1991. ‘Public Eating in Afghanistan’. In Walker, Harlan (ed.), Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery, pp. 258–68. Totness: Prospect Books.Google Scholar
Safran, William. 1991. ‘Diasporas in Modern Societies: Myths of Homeland and Return’. Diaspora (Spring): 8399.Google Scholar
Sahadeo, Jeff. 2011b. ‘The Accidental Traders: Marginalization and Opportunity from the Southern Republics to Late Soviet Moscow’. Central Asian Survey 30(3–4): 521–40.Google Scholar
Sahadeo, Jeff 2011a. Russian Colonial Society in Tashkent, 1865–1923. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Salamandra, Christa. 2004. A New Old Damascus: Authenticity and Distinction in Urban Syria. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Sanders, Todd and West, Harry. 2003. ‘Power Revealed and Concealed in the New World Order’. In Sanders, Todd and West, Harry (eds), Transparency and Conspiracy, pp. 137. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Sands, Chris and Qazizai, Fazelminallah. 2019. Night Letters: Gulbuddin Hekmatyar and the Afghan Islamists Who Changed the World. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Saxer, Martin. 2016b. ‘A Spectacle of Maps: Cartographic Hopes and Anxieties in the Pamirs’. Cross-Currents: East Asia and Cultural Review 21.Google Scholar
Saxer, Martin 2016a. ‘New Roads, Old Trades: Neighbouring China in North-Western Nepal’. In Saxer, Martin and Zhang, Juan (eds), The Art of Neighbouring: Mediating Borders along China’s Frontiers, pp. 7394. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.Google Scholar
Saxer, Martin. 2011. ‘Between China and Nepal: Trans-Himalayan Trade and the Second Life of Development in Upper Humla’. Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review 2(2): 424–46.Google Scholar
Scheffer, Gabriel. 1986. ‘A New Field of Study: Modern Diasporas in International Politics’. In Scheffer, G. (ed.), Modern Diasporas in International Politics. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Schneider, Jane and Rapp, Rayna (eds). 1995. Articulating Histories: Exploring the Influence of Eric Wolf. Berkeley: University of Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Schuster, Liza. 2011. ‘Turning Refugees into “Illegal Migrants”: Afghan Asylum Seekers in Europe’. Ethnic and Racial Studies 32: 1392–407.Google Scholar
Sha, Heila. 2019. ‘Transnational Marriages in Yiwu, China: Tensions over Money’. Global Networks 20(4): 766–84.Google Scholar
Sha, Heila 2019. ‘Transnational Marriage in Yiwu, China: Trade, Settlement and Mobility’. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 46(11): 2326–45.Google Scholar
Shahrani, Nazif. 2001. ‘Pining for Bukhara in Afghanistan: Poetics and Politics of Exilic Identity and Emotions’. In Kocaoglu, Timur (ed.), Reform Movements and Revolutions in Turkistan 1900–1924: Studies in Honour of Osman Khoj, pp. 369–91. Haarlem, Netherlands: SOTA.Google Scholar
Shahrani, Nazif. 1984. ‘Causes and Context of Responses to the Saur Revolution in Badakhshan’. In Shahrani, M. N. and Canfield, R. L. (eds), Revolutions and Rebellions in Afghanistan: Anthropological Perspectives, pp.139–69. Berkeley: Institute of International Studies, University of California.Google Scholar
Shalinsky, Audrey. 1993. Long Years of Exile. Washington, DC: University Press of America.Google Scholar
Sharan, Timoor and Bose, Srinjoy. 2016. ‘Political Networks and the 2014 Afghan Presidential Election: Power Restructuring, Ethnicity and State Stability’. Conflict, Security and Development 16(6): 613–33.Google Scholar
Sharan, Timoor and Heathershaw, Jonathan. 2011. ‘Identity Politics and Statebuilding in Post-Bonn Afghanistan: The 2009 Presidential Election’. Ethnopolitics 10(3–4): 297319.Google Scholar
Shipton, P. 2007. The Nature of Entrustment: Intimacy, Exchange and the Sacred in Africa. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Simone, Abdou Maliqalim. 2004. ‘People as Infrastructure: Intersecting Fragments in Johannesburg’. Public Culture 16(3): 407–29.Google Scholar
Simpfendorfer, Ben. 2009. The New Silk Road: How a Rising Arab World Is Turning Away from the West and Rediscovering China. London: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Smith, Grace Martin. 1980. ‘The Özbek Tekkes of Istanbul’. Der Islam 57(1): 130–39.Google Scholar
Smail, Daniel Lord and Shryock, Andrew. 2013. ‘History and the “Pre”’. The American Historical Review 118: 709–37.Google Scholar
Stephens, Julia. 2014. ‘An Uncertain Inheritance: The Imperial Travels of Legal Migrants from British Indian to Ottoman Iraq’. Law and History Review 32(4): 749–72.Google Scholar
Stein, Sarah Abrevaya. 2008. Plumes: Ostrich Feathers, Jews, and a Lost World of Global Commerce. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Skvirskaja, Vera. 2019. ‘Russian Merchant Legacies in Post-Soviet Trade with China: Moral Economy, Economic Success and Business Innovation in Yiwu’. Anthropology and History 29: 4866.Google Scholar
Skvirskaja, Vera 2014. ‘The Many Faces of Turkish Odessa Ecumenical Communities and Multiple Alliances across the Black Sea’. Focaal 70: 4963.Google Scholar
Skvirskaja, Vera. 2012. ‘At the City’s Margins: Selective Cosmopolitans in Odessa’. In Humphrey, Caroline and Skvirskaja, V. (eds), Post Cosmopolitan Cities: Explorations of Co-Existence, pp. 94118. London: Berghahn.Google Scholar
Spector, Regine. 2017. Order at the Bazaar: Power and Trade in Central Asia. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Spooner, Brian. 1986. ‘Weavers and Dealers: The Authenticity of an Oriental Carpet’. In Appadurai, Arjun (ed.), The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective, pp. 195235. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Suhail, Adeem and Lutfi, Ameem. 2016. ‘Our City, Your Crisis: The Baloch of Karachi and the of British India’. South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 39(4): 891907.Google Scholar
Subtelny, Maria Eva. 1984. ‘Scenes from the Literary Life of Tīmurīd Hērāt’. In Savory, R. and Agius, D. A. (eds), Logos Islamicus: Studia Islamica in Honorem Georgii Michaelis Wickens, pp. 133–75. Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies.Google Scholar
Subrahmanyam, Sanjay. 2007. ‘Connected Histories: Towards a Reconfiguration of Early Modern Eurasia’. Modern Asian Studies 31(3): 735–62.Google Scholar
Sood, Gagan. 2016. India and the Islamic Heartlands: An Eighteenth-Century World of Circulation and Exchange. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tapper, Nancy. 1973. ‘The Advent of Pashtūn “Māldārs” in North-Western Afghanistan’. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 36(1): 5579.Google Scholar
Thiranagama, Sharika, Toby, Kelly and Forment, Carlos. 2018. ‘Introduction: Whose Civility?Anthropological Theory 18(2–3): 153–74.Google Scholar
Thum, Rian. 2014. ‘China in Islam: Turki Views from the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries’. Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review 3(2): 573600.Google Scholar
Thum, Rian and Huda Abdul Ghafour Amin Kashgary, 2021. ‘The Turkistanis of Mecca: Community Histories of Periphery and Center’. Asian Ethnicity 22(1): 188207.Google Scholar
Sharan, Timor. 2013. ‘The Network Politics of International Statebuilding: Intervention and Statehood in Post-2001 Afghanistan’. Unpublished Phd Thesis, Exeter: University of Exeter.Google Scholar
Tolo News. 2016. ‘Afghan Refugees in Iran “Sent to Fight” Syrian War’. 9 August.Google Scholar
Tolo News 2015. ‘Fraud in Passport Office Revealed after Iranian National Got Afghan Passport’. 22 August.Google Scholar
Tölölyan, Khachig. 2000. ‘Elites and Institutions in the Armenian Transnation’. Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies 9(1): 107–36.Google Scholar
Trivellato, Francesca. 2009. The Familiarity of Strangers: The Sephardic Diaspora, Livorno, and Cross-Cultural Trade in the Early Modern Period. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
UNODC. 2009. ‘Misuse of Licit Trade for Opiate Trafficking in Western and Central Asia: A Threat Assessment’. UNODC, 2012. www.unodc.org/documents/islamicrepublicofiran/Misuse_of_licit_trade_for_opiate_trafficking_in_Western_and_Central_Asia-_A_Threat_Assessment-Oct._2012.pdf.Google Scholar
Vaissière, Étienne de la. 2018. Sogdian Traders: A History. Translated by James Ward. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Van Schendel, Willem. 2020. ‘Fragmented Sovereignty and Unregulated Flows: The Bangladesh–China–India–Myanmar Corridor’. In Hung, Eva and Ngo, Tak-Wing (eds), Shadow Exchanges along the New Silk Roads, pp. 3773. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.Google Scholar
Van Schendel, Willem 2002. ‘Geographies of Knowing, Geographies of Ignorance: Jumping Scale in Southeast Asia’. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 20(6): 647–68.Google Scholar
Venkatesh, Sudhir. 2002. ‘“Doin’ the Hustle”: Constructing the Ethnographer in the American Ghetto’. Ethnography 3(91): 91111.Google Scholar
Verdery, Katherine. 2018. My Life as a Spy: Investigations in a Secret Police File. London: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Verkaaik, Oskar. 2002. ‘The Captive State: Corruption, Intelligence Agencies, and Ethnicity in Pakistan’. In Hansen, T. and Stepputat, F. (eds), States of Imagination: Ethnographic Explorations of the Postcolonial State, pp. 345–64. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Vora, Neha. 2013. Impossible Citizens: Dubai’s Indian Diaspora. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Vora, Neha and Koch, Natalie. 2015. ‘Everyday Inclusions: Rethinking Ethnocracy, Kafala, and Belonging in the Arabian Peninsula.’ Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism 15(3): 540–52.Google Scholar
Warkotsch, Alexander (ed.). 2011. The European Union and Central Asia. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Warsi, Sahil. 2015. ‘Being and Belonging in Delhi: Afghan Individuals and Communities in a Global City’. PhD Dissertation, SOAS, University of London.Google Scholar
Werbner, Pnina. 2016. ‘Vernacular Cosmopolitanism as an Ethical Disposition: Sufi Networks, Hospitality, and Translocal Inclusivity’. In Buskens, L. and van Sandwijk, A. (eds), Islamic Studies in the Twenty-First Century, pp. 223–40. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.Google Scholar
Werbner, Pnina 2004. ‘Theorising Complex Diasporas: Purity and Hybridity in the South Asian Public Sphere in Britain’. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 30(5): 895911.Google Scholar
Werbner, Pnina 1999. ‘Global Pathways: Working-Class Cosmopolitans and the Creation of Transnational Ethnic Worlds’. Social Anthropology 7(1): 1737.Google Scholar
Werbner, Pnina. 1980. ‘From Rags to Riches: Manchester Pakistanis in the Textile Trade’. New Community 8(1–2): 8495.Google Scholar
Wimmer, Andreas and Glick Schiller, Nina. 2002. ‘Methodological Nationalism and Beyond: Nation-State Building, Migration and the Social Sciences’. Global Networks 2(4): 301–34.Google Scholar
Winter, Tim. 2019. Geocultural Power: China’s Quest to Revive the Silk Roads for the Twenty First Century. Chicago: Chicago University Press.Google Scholar
Wolf, Eric. 1010 (1982). Europe and the People without History. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2010.Google Scholar
Yolaçan, Serkan. 2019b. ‘Insight 200: A Two-Tiered Middle East; Prospects for the Asian Century’. Singapore: NUS Middle East Insights. https://mei.nus.edu.sg/publication/insight-200-a-two-tiered-middle-east-prospects-for-the-asian-century/.Google Scholar
Yolaçan, Serkan. 2019a. ‘Azeri Networks through Thick and Thin: West Asian Politics from a Diasporic Eye’. Journal of Eurasian Studies 10(1): 2647.Google Scholar
Yolaçan, Serkan 2018. ‘Order beyond Borders: The Azerbaijani Triangle across Iran, Turkey, and Russia’. PhD Dissertation, Durham, NC, Duke University.Google Scholar
Yarosh, Oleg and Brylov, Denys. 2011. ‘Muslim Communities and Islamic Network Institutions in Ukraine: Contesting Authorities in Shaping of Islamic Localities’. In Górak-Sosnowska, Katarzyna (ed.), Muslims in Poland and Eastern Europe: Widening the European Discourse on Islam, pp. 252–65. Warsaw: Oriental Institute.Google Scholar
Zanca, Russell. 2007. ‘Fat and All That’. In Zanca, Russell and Sahadeo, Jeff (eds), Everyday Life in Central Asia, pp. 178–97. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Zhang, Juan and Saxer, Martin. 2017. ‘Introduction: Neighbouring in the Borderworlds along China’s Frontiers’. In Zhang, Juan and Saxer, Martin (eds), The Art of Neighbouring: Making Relations across China’s Borders, pp. 1133. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.Google Scholar
Ziaratjaye, Jawed. 2017. ‘Activists Call for Maintenance of Jewish Sites in Herat’. Tolo News, 17 April.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure no-reply@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • References
  • Magnus Marsden, University of Sussex
  • Book: Beyond the Silk Roads
  • Online publication: 31 August 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108974387.012
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • References
  • Magnus Marsden, University of Sussex
  • Book: Beyond the Silk Roads
  • Online publication: 31 August 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108974387.012
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • References
  • Magnus Marsden, University of Sussex
  • Book: Beyond the Silk Roads
  • Online publication: 31 August 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108974387.012
Available formats
×