The Young Ottomans Turkish Critics of the Eastern Question in the Late Nineteenth Century

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2010-12-15
Publisher(s): Tauris Academic Studies
List Price: $144.45

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Summary

The Eastern Question, as it was termed by the European Powers in the nineteenth century, was a debate primarily concerned with the issue of 'what to do with the Turk?'. The Ottoman Empire had become known as the 'sick man of Europe' following its gradual decline since the eighteenth century, and its demise would be highly problematic for the crowned heads of Europe. This unique book focuses on the intellectual and political dynamics of the first Ottoman political opposition in the modern sense, the so-called 'Young Ottomans'. In the process it narrates an alternative version of the Eastern Question as experienced and told by its Eastern observers and critics. Nazan Çiçek shows how an important section of the newly-rising semi-autonomous Ottoman Muslim Turkish intelligentsia in the second half of the nineteenth century effectively answered the alternative question of 'what to do with the West?'.

Author Biography

Nazan Cicek completed her PhD at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London in 2006. She currently teaches at Ankara University in the Faculty of Political Sciences. She has published articles on the political and intellectual history of the Ottoman Empire and Turkish Republic in several journals including Middle Eastern Studies and Études Balkaniques.   

Table of Contents

Introduction * The Creatan Insurrection 1866-1869 * The Question of Equality Between Muslims and Non-Muslims and the Foreign Intervention into the ‘Domestic’ Affairs of the Ottoman Empire * The Financial Crisis of the Ottoman Empire and the Young Ottomans * Conclusion

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