Untold Histories of the Middle East

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Ankara Government
Armenian survivors
Armenian Women
baba
balkan
Balkan Muslims
Balkan States
Bani Sakhr
Category=GTM
Category=N
Category=NHA
Category=NHG
cemal
Central Government
empire
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eq_history
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eq_nobargain
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gendered silencing
hajji
Interfaith Marriage
interfaith marriage Egypt
Interfaith Unions
Islamic Marriage
King George III
Middle Eastern social history
Muslim Husband
Muslim Worlds
Mustafa Kemal
non-Muslim Wife
ottoman
Ottoman Armenians
Ottoman Greek
Ottoman historiography
Ottoman Patriotism
Ottoman State
Palestinian revolt analysis
pasha
patriot
Pregnant Bride
state
Sublime State
Sultan Selim III
suppressed narratives Middle East
Turkish Historiography
Turkish Nationalist Historiography
Turkish War
wars
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138788893
  • Weight: 408g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Feb 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Much traditional historiography consciously and unconsciously glosses over certain discourses, narratives, and practices. This book examines silences or omissions in Middle Eastern history at the turn of the twenty-first century, to give a fuller account of the society, culture and politics.

With a particular focus on the Ottoman Empire, Turkey, Egypt, Iran and Palestine, the contributors consider how and why such silences occur, as well as the timing and motivation for breaking them. Introducing unexpected, sometimes counter-intuitive, issues in history, chapters examine:

  • women and children survivors of the Armenian massacres in 1915
  • Greek-Orthodox subjects who supported the Ottoman empire and the formation of the Turkish republic
  • the conflicts among Palestinians during the revolt of 1936-39
  • pre-marital sex in modern Egypt
  • Arab authors writing about the Balkans
  • the economic, not national or racial, origins of anti-Armenian violence
  • the European women who married Muslim Egyptians

Drawing on a wide range of sources and methodologies, such as interviews; newly-discovered archives; fictional accounts; and memoirs, each chapter analyses a story and its suppression, considering how their absences have affected our previous understandings of the history of the Middle East.

Amy Singer is Professor of Ottoman history at Tel Aviv University. Her research focuses on the Ottoman public kitchens (imaret), and on the city of Edirne. She won the 2008 Sakıp Sabancı International Research Award in Turkish Studies for 'The Persistence of Philanthropy'.

Christoph K. Neumann is chair of Turkish Studies at Ludwig Maximilian University Munich. He has published widely on Ottoman history. He did research and taught at the Orient-Institute in Istanbul, in Prague and again at different universities in Istanbul.

Selçuk Akşin Somel is Assistant Professor of Ottoman History at Sabanci University, Turkey. He specializes in Ottoman education, gender history, legitimacy and power, and peripheral populations. He previously taught at Freiburg University, and Bilkent University, Ankara.