This introduction lays out the context and aims for the special issue’s focus on Ottoman transcultural memories. We explain the pertinence of transcultural memories for the Ottoman Empire, and we discuss contemporary politicizations of Ottoman nostalgia, or neo-Ottomanism. We define the key terms in our analyses, rooting our approach in memory studies, and distinguishing a transcultural approach to memory from comparable approaches in postcolonial studies. The introduction further sets out how the special issue refigures memory studies, transcultural, and Ottoman studies. The issue’s contents are outlined, with the interdisciplinary and transmedial contributions necessarily driven by the diverse archives of Ottoman transcultural memorie...
Probably nowhere are the themes of tolerance and multiculturalism more prominently at display than i...
In this article, we discuss the pitfalls and benefits of conceptual history as an approach to Ottoma...
This article explores how monuments must not be seen as independent or self-referential depositories...
This introduction lays out the context and aims for the special issue’s focus on Ottoman transcultur...
This introduction lays out the context and aims for the special issue’s focus on Ottoman transcultur...
This article engages with the conversations taking place in the photographic space between then and ...
With contributions from several of the Balkan countries that once were united under the aegis of th...
Recent research has suggested that in the contemporary globalized and digitized world memories trans...
The thesis discusses the remembrance of the Ottoman heritage and presentation of Ottoman culture at ...
One of the largest and one of the longest, the Ottoman Empire is still relatively understudied. Run...
Memory studies has moved from the cultural collective, rooted within the bounds of the nation state,...
The Twentieth Century in European Memory investigates contested and divisive memories. Focusing on q...
This article engages with the conversations taking place in the photographic space between then and ...
This article discusses the uses of conceptual history and historical semantics for Ottoman studies. ...
This dissertation offers a new reading of Modern Turkish literature as drawing on its Ottoman past a...
Probably nowhere are the themes of tolerance and multiculturalism more prominently at display than i...
In this article, we discuss the pitfalls and benefits of conceptual history as an approach to Ottoma...
This article explores how monuments must not be seen as independent or self-referential depositories...
This introduction lays out the context and aims for the special issue’s focus on Ottoman transcultur...
This introduction lays out the context and aims for the special issue’s focus on Ottoman transcultur...
This article engages with the conversations taking place in the photographic space between then and ...
With contributions from several of the Balkan countries that once were united under the aegis of th...
Recent research has suggested that in the contemporary globalized and digitized world memories trans...
The thesis discusses the remembrance of the Ottoman heritage and presentation of Ottoman culture at ...
One of the largest and one of the longest, the Ottoman Empire is still relatively understudied. Run...
Memory studies has moved from the cultural collective, rooted within the bounds of the nation state,...
The Twentieth Century in European Memory investigates contested and divisive memories. Focusing on q...
This article engages with the conversations taking place in the photographic space between then and ...
This article discusses the uses of conceptual history and historical semantics for Ottoman studies. ...
This dissertation offers a new reading of Modern Turkish literature as drawing on its Ottoman past a...
Probably nowhere are the themes of tolerance and multiculturalism more prominently at display than i...
In this article, we discuss the pitfalls and benefits of conceptual history as an approach to Ottoma...
This article explores how monuments must not be seen as independent or self-referential depositories...