Gekas, Athanasios2015-08-282015-08-282014-09-302015-08-28http://hdl.handle.net/10315/29918This thesis illustrates the narrative of the Greek political refugees of Tashkent and seeks to recognize their Greek and Soviet identity. By examining the public and private spaces of Greek political refugees in Soviet Tashkent between 1949-1974, the thesis identifies the beliefs, symbols and practices, which reveal the hybridity of Greek-Soviet identity. Research was based on oral histories and Greek-language newspapers published during the period as well as on memoirs of Greeks who lived in Tashkent. This will aid our understanding of the collective memory and homemaking narrative of the Greek experience in Soviet Tashkent. The collective narrative of Greeks of Tashkent was very positive and idealized. Greeks legitimized their settlement in Tashkent by defending Soviet ideology and contributing to and developing Soviet society. The homemaking narrative allowed Greeks to belong to the imagined Greek Soviet Community, the imagined Soviet community and the imagined Greek community.enAuthor owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.HistoryBelonging to Greece and the Soviet Union: Greeks of Tashkent, 1949-1974Electronic Thesis or Dissertation2015-08-28Political refugeesGreeksTashkentGreek civil warGreek diasporaPhilotimoFilotimoHomemaking narrativeGreek identityGreeknessSoviet identitySoviet UnionKKEKOTKETGreek Communist PartyCollective narrativePublic spacePrivate spacesImagined communityImagined communitiesSymbolsCommunity formation