The Kazan Teachers’ Seminary and the Formation of the Kazakh Intelligentsia: The Experience of Socialization and Pedagogical Activity (1872–1918)
Казанская учительская семинария и формирование казахской интеллигенции: опыт социализации и педагогической деятельности (1872–1918 гг.)
Sultangalieva G.S. Begimbayeva Z.S. Suinova A.T. Dyusembek Z.
1 March 2026Cherkas Global University Press
Bylye Gody
2026#21Issue 1399 - 409 pp.
Since the 1870s, the Russian Empire entered a new stage of its educational policy aimed at establishing a network of professional institutions, primarily teacher seminaries, intended to shape a state-loyal teaching class and influence the worldview of the younger generation. This article examines the activities of the Kazan Teachers’ Seminary (1872–1918) as an imperial institutional experiment that, for more than four decades, provided pedagogical training for the Kazan educational district. The research is based on archival materials from the central repositories of Kazakhstan and Tatarstan, including administrative documents (petitions, official correspondence), personal records, and biographical data on Kazakh students and graduates. The methodological framework of the study draws on Homi Bhabha’s concept of interstitial subjectivity, which makes it possible to reveal the ambivalence of the Kazakh students’ identity. While studying in a new socio-cultural environment (the city, the library, the educational system), they acquired new patterns of thought, worldviews, and behavioral models. However, as members of Muslim (Sunni) and Kazakh (nomadic) communities, upon returning to the steppe they became intermediaries between imperial authorities and local society, transmitting new forms of knowledge and models of behavior. The article demonstrates that the Kazakh youth educated at the Kazan Seminary gradually integrated into the sociocultural space of the empire, becoming both participants in and objects of the imperial policy of identity transformation. Moreover, the imperial educational policy in training Kazakh teachers had a long-term impact, as it produced the professional cadres who later played a crucial role in the formation of the post-imperial Kazakh state and its intellectual elite during the early Soviet period.
educational policy , identity , Kazakh graduates , Russian empire , schools , teachers seminary
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Al-Farabi Kazakh National University (Farabi University), Kazakhstan
K. Zhubanov Aktobe Regional University, Kazakhstan
Al-Farabi Kazakh National University (Farabi University)
K. Zhubanov Aktobe Regional University
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