Georgia is a small country in the Caucasus of about 4 million people bordering Russia, Turkey, Armenia and Azerbaijan. The Georgian language is part of the Kartvelian language family and is unrelated to other language families outside the region. It is also an incredibly difficult language to learn. Although the Georgian people punched above their weight in Soviet politics, economics and culture, due to the two above-mentioned factors, English-language scholarship on Georgia is somewhat scarce (especially scholarship accessible to a more general audience that goes beyond being a broad history introduction). Thankfully though, as with any niche field, those inside it really know their stuff and, given the chance, are happy to share their knowledge. Which explains why a new podcast such as Reimaging Soviet Georgia can from its inception land many eminent specialists in their fields. And valuably, 80% of the podcasts runtime is composed of these scholars, speaking eloquently at length, in detail, and with much nuance about their research. It is an enjoyable and insightful listen, even for someone already familiar with their writings.
Unfortunately the other 20% of the podcast consists of the hosts/creators, who primarily and hamfistedly try to steer the conversation toward apologism for the Soviet State and Western NGO bashing. It is amusing though how the guests generally sidestep, don’t indulge in the hosts’ political agenda.
Recommend episodes (so far): episode 1, part 1 - The State if Soviet History with Timothy Blauvelt; episode 2 - Soviet Georgian Migrants, Memory and Rivers with Jeff Sahadeo; episode 3 - Stalin, Social Democracy and Georgia with Ronald Grigor Suny; episode 4 - The First Republic with Stephen F. Jones; episode 7 - The Soviet World of Soviet Georgians with Erik Scott; episode 9 Abkhaz Mobilization in the Georgian-Abkhaz War with Anastasia Shesterinina; episode 13 - Women & Film in Early Soviet Georgia with Salome Tsopurashvili; episode 16 - The 2008 Russo-Georgian War with Gerard Toal