Available Formats
Ottoman Culture and the Project of Modernity: Reform and Translation in the Tanzimat Novel
By (Author) Prof. Monica M. Ringer
Edited by Dr Etienne Charrire
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
16th April 2020
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: general
Middle Eastern history
Sociology
894.353309
Hardback
232
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
503g
Central to the nineteenth-century Ottoman Tanzimat reform project, the novel originally developed outside of Ottoman space, yet was adopted as a didactic tool to model and generate new forms of Ottoman citizenship. Essays in this book explore the appropriation of the novel as a literary genre and its deployment in the late Ottoman cultural project of constructing an Ottoman modernity. Analyzing key texts and authors, from the works of Ahmet Midhat Efendi to Mizanci Murad and Vartan Pasha, among others, the book's chapters explore the novel genre as far more than a case of importation of Western and non-Ottoman cultural productions, but rather as a vehicle for the cultivation of indigenous modern subjectivities.
'Ottoman Culture and the Project of Modernity is a successfully conceived volume on the nineteenth-century Ottoman Empire and its complex modernization efforts, highlighting the significance of local elements in the nineteenth-century transformations, showing that modernity did not always mean "western."' * Emine Evered, Associate Professor, Michigan State University, USA *
Monica M. Ringer is Professor of History and Asian Languages and Civilisations at Amherst College, USA. Etienne E. Charriere is Assistant Professor in the Department of Turkish Literature at Bilkent University, Turkey.