House with Wisteria

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A01=Halide Edib
Abdul Medjid
Ahmed Aga
Author_Halide Edib
Battal Gazi
Category=DNC
Category=NHG
Circassian Youth
Colored Lady
education reform Middle East
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Extreme Unionists
female agency in Ottoman memoirs
Galata Serai
gender emancipation studies
Golden Eyes
Grand Vizir
HalidDib
Kiazim Karabekir
Lord Stratford De Redcliffe
Miss Fry
Moslem Turks
Muslim feminist thought
Namik Kemal
nation-building narratives
Ottoman women's history
Palace Lady
pan-Islamic Ideal
political participation Ottoman era
Selim III
Tanzimat Period
Turkish Meters
Turkish Quarter
Turkish Theater
Turkish Writers
Young Man
Young Ottomans
Young Turks

Product details

  • ISBN 9781412810029
  • Weight: 684g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Feb 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This edition of Halide Edib Adivar's Memoirs, prefaced with Sibel Erol's excellent introduction, is important and timely. When stereotypes of women in the Muslim world abound, Halide's memoirs remind us of the courage and dedication of "foremothers" who struggled for emancipation at both personal and national levels. These memoirs open a window on the search for personal expression of a woman caught up in the oppressive dynamics of her polygamous households (parental and marital), and the travails of national liberation and nation-building in Turkey, in which she played an active role. Halide speaks to us with an urgency which now cries out to be heard more than ever.

Halide Edib's memoirs are indispensable reading for anyone interested in the history of childhood and education in the late Ottoman Empire. Edib worked to spread public education, instituting schools in Istanbul and in the Arab provinces during World War I. Her account is vibrant and direct, off ering an excellent witness to this critical period during which the Empire collapsed.

Halide Edib lived through the most turbulent times in modern Turkish history. Most unusually for a woman of her day, she did so not only as an eyewitness, but as an active political participant. She was on close personal terms with powerful leaders such as Talat Pasha and Ataturk, but retained a critical and independent mind. All this gives her memoirs their unique character. The book provides new light on the Ottoman Empire and the Turkish nation.

Halide Edib (1884-1964) was a participant and partisan of the major events in Turkish twentieth century history. Self-educated, she was multi-lingual and multi-cultural. She was an ardent feminist. She served as information and public relations officer for the government of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, and hence was close to the players and politics of the new regime. Sibel Erol is senior lecturer in Turkish in the Department of Middle Eastern Studies in New York City. The author of numerous professional scholarly articles, her work has appeared in American Association of Teachers of Turkic Languages Bulletin, The Middle East Journal and Middle East Studies Association Bulletin.

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