Thursday, February 29, 2024

Article Review: Cultural Landscape of Ulanbataar, Mongolia

Introduction

            Mongolia is a country with such a diverse history that it is difficult to find a national identity in modern times.  Many people of different cultures from past and present have occupied its territory, including nomadic pastoralists, Mongols, Buddhists, and Soviets.  Regime changes in the country have overturned previous ideologies with such high frequency that a future socio-political trajectory is nebulous (Diener and Hagen 2013, 623).  Most recently, the transition from a Soviet-influenced, communist elite in the 1990s has created a new path for Mongolia in the contemporary global system that integrates various power structures from its past (ibid. 624).  The researchers of this article used a cultural landscape analysis to piece together the cultural friction as it relates to urban design and modern development in Mongolia’s capital, Ulaanbaatar.

 

Literature Review

            Street names, monuments, landmarks, statues, and architecture can all experience alterations in name or form as a new regime replaces an old one (ibid. 625).  Since capital cities are rarely razed after a political or ideological shift, it stands to reason that their landscape becomes a hybrid of the old regime and the new (ibid. 625).  This can ripple across centuries, as new regimes layer themselves on top of older ones, creating hybrids that are multiplied.  Ulaanbaatar is a relatively young city, but it has experienced so many regime changes that the layers have combined into a national identity that doesn’t claim a single cultural form from its history.

 

Background and Geographical Context

Ulaanbaatar is the capital of Mongolia.  It has changed names many times, most recently in 1924 when the Mongolian republic was established (Britannica 2024).  Located between two perennial world powers (China and Russia), it has experienced much social and cultural change over the centuries.  Because of its landlocked location, the country acts as a buffer between its more powerful neighbors, absorbing cultural influences from the areas surrounding it.

 

Methods Used

 The researchers of the article adopted a cultural landscape method of presenting their data.  According to Gomez and Jones (2010, 225), this involves searching through historical archives to document “when and where the landscape was created, by whom, why, and how [it has] been altered…”.  A cultural landscape continuum consists of historical and contemporary snapshots of accumulated historical occupance (ibid. 227), normally at an urban location.  Methods for retrieving this information may involve investigating historical documents, public records, or for contemporary snapshots, fieldwork, surveying, and interviewing (ibid. 227). 

The authors in this study mostly used written historical documents to illustrate the cultural landscape of Ulaanbaatar.  Historical documents come in two types: primary or secondary.   Primary documents are first-hand accounts of events, while secondary documents are second-hand perspectives, often written by a contemporary historian or journalist who doesn’t directly experience the events.

The documents used in this study were primarily secondary.  They describe how Ulaanbaatar first appeared as a monastery for Buddhists in 1639 (ibid. 626).  Trade helped establish permanent settlements in the region, which had been suited to nomadic peoples due to its extensive grasslands.  As trade increased and elites gained wealth, sedentarism became more common (ibid. 626), creating the first seed of a national identity based on Buddhist culture.  Chinese merchant settlement increased during the Qing dynasty, from 1691 to 1911, resulting in structures that hybridized Mongolian, Tibetan, and Chinese styles (ibid. 627-628).  Tsarist Russia began influencing the region in 1863, starting a trend toward international geopolitical development (ibid. 627).  Soviet socialism ignited a big change on the city in the 1920s, transforming many buildings that were formerly religious into social services, like hospitals and schools (ibid. 628).  Street names were also changed to reflect the new leadership.  Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the cultural landscape has morphed into a more integrated one that reunites the various ruling elements of the country’s past.  This came about because globalization championed a more democratic, Western ideology that valued freedom, expanding business and tourism in the city (ibid. 638).

 

Analysis and Discussion

            As with most historical or cultural landscape analyses, the study had less emphasis on quantitative data and more on qualitative explanations.  The idea was to paint a narrative of the built environment of Ulaanbaatar from an historical perspective as it changed leadership between eras.  It was thoroughly demonstrated how the Mongolian national image has evolved as each new power occupied its territory.  Photographs were used to strengthen the analysis by giving the visual landscape of Ulaanbaatar a higher understanding.

            One challenge I have for the method is that the iconography of a city is generally constructed by those in power and not those who have been marginalized.  As the victors of history generally write it, the conquerors of a territory transform its cultural landscape.  We see this in the way the Mongolian image largely borrows elements from its ruling powers and not the indigenous nomads who lived there for centuries.  The Mongols, widely regarded as founders of the nation, were the first in a series of ruling classes that shaped its landscape, and they’d conquered it long before 1639- the earliest date that is referenced in this article.  Yet little is known about the nomadic tribes who preceded them, for the consolidation of their tribes is what became the Mongols as we know them today (Bawden 2024).

 

Conclusion

            The researchers of this article did a fantastic job in providing a cultural background of the landscape of Ulaanbaatar.  Despite the dominating iconography of the ruling class, some believe that modernization in Mongolia “calls for the marginalization of nomadic values in the new national ideology” (ibid. 643).  How much this translates to street names, buildings, and statues named in honor of nomads remains to be seen.  Globalization remains a powerful force on the cultural landscape of Ulaanbaatar, one in which traditional nomads will once again struggle to reconcile. 


Bibliography

 

Bawden, C. R.. "Genghis Khan." Encyclopedia Britannica, January 1, 2024. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Genghis-Khan.

Britannica, T. Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Ulaanbaatar." Encyclopedia Britannica. February 11, 2024. https://www.britannica.com/place/Ulaanbaatar.

Diener, Alexander and Joshua Hagen.  “City of Felt and Concrete: Negotiating Cultural Hybridity in Mongolia’s Capital of Ulaanbaatar”. Nationalities Papers 41, no. 4 (2013): 622-650.  DOI: 10.1080/00905992.2012.743513

Gomez, Basil, and John Paul Jones III. Research Methods in Geography. Chichester: Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2010.

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