This dissertation considers how imperial subjects and citizens made claims to political belonging in the period prior to the consolidation of nationalism as an ideology. Focusing on French and Ottoman texts produced between 1718 and 1905 that narrate movements across geographic, political, and cultural borders, my study explores shifting dynamics of political identification and belonging that defy easy geopolitical narratives, either of long-standing confrontation between “East” and “West” or of cosmopolitan coexistence in “contact zones.” I argue that the relational and affective sensibility that characterizes belonging to a political community was cultivated and sustained through cross-cultural exchange: ideas and ideals of religion, geog...
This dissertation integrates the eastern borderland region of Van into the history of Ottoman modern...
This dissertation revises the history of the late Ottoman Empire using masculinity as a category of ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2021This dissertation examines the cultural and diplomatic...
Studying texts written in some of the main literary idioms of the late Ottoman Empire (primarily Gre...
This research project examines the dominant discourses of national identity and delineates the proce...
What impact did American Protestant institutions play in educating women in the late Ottoman Empire?...
This dissertation examines representations of Muslim women in contemporary Germany and considers the...
This thesis analyses complex and contradictory discursive articulations of gender, modernisation, an...
This research project examines the dominant discourses of national identity and delineates the proce...
This dissertation analyzes how Ottoman and Turkish women Muslim intellectuals established a set of a...
This dissertation offers a new reading of Modern Turkish literature as drawing on its Ottoman past a...
This dissertation traces the emergence of transnational political institutions among Arabophone Otto...
pp.297 Supported by grants from the AHRC, and Leverhulme Trust, this monograph (translated into Tur...
This dissertation examines how Antiochian Greek Orthodox Christians in the Levant and diaspora navig...
This dissertation examines the formation of Ottoman sovereignty in the nineteenth and early twentiet...
This dissertation integrates the eastern borderland region of Van into the history of Ottoman modern...
This dissertation revises the history of the late Ottoman Empire using masculinity as a category of ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2021This dissertation examines the cultural and diplomatic...
Studying texts written in some of the main literary idioms of the late Ottoman Empire (primarily Gre...
This research project examines the dominant discourses of national identity and delineates the proce...
What impact did American Protestant institutions play in educating women in the late Ottoman Empire?...
This dissertation examines representations of Muslim women in contemporary Germany and considers the...
This thesis analyses complex and contradictory discursive articulations of gender, modernisation, an...
This research project examines the dominant discourses of national identity and delineates the proce...
This dissertation analyzes how Ottoman and Turkish women Muslim intellectuals established a set of a...
This dissertation offers a new reading of Modern Turkish literature as drawing on its Ottoman past a...
This dissertation traces the emergence of transnational political institutions among Arabophone Otto...
pp.297 Supported by grants from the AHRC, and Leverhulme Trust, this monograph (translated into Tur...
This dissertation examines how Antiochian Greek Orthodox Christians in the Levant and diaspora navig...
This dissertation examines the formation of Ottoman sovereignty in the nineteenth and early twentiet...
This dissertation integrates the eastern borderland region of Van into the history of Ottoman modern...
This dissertation revises the history of the late Ottoman Empire using masculinity as a category of ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2021This dissertation examines the cultural and diplomatic...