ADM 5176
Comparative Perspectives to Ottoman and European History
UPL 528
Historical Roots of Urban Politics and Local Governments
Spring Semester 2015
Tuesdays: 9:40-12:30
E. Attila AYTEKİN
Office: A311
Office Hours: Tuesdays 14:00-16:00
Phone: 210-2072
E-mail:
Course description: This graduate course aims to familiarize the students with key issues and debates regarding the Ottoman Empire and major European countries. The course employs a rigorously comparative perspective and the weekly topics are arranged accordingly. This semester the course will emphasize urban history. The reading materials deal with European cities in different parts of the continent (namely, major urban centers in Western, Central and Eastern Europe) and Ottoman cities in different regions of the Empire (Anatolia, Balkans, Arab lands). The goal is not only to provide a general panorama of European and Ottoman urban development in historical context, but also to map put key themes around which European and Ottoman cities can be meaningfully and fruitfully compared. While some of the discussions will cover earlier or later periods, the focus throughout the semester will be on the nineteenth century and early twentieth century developments.
Course Requirements: The course requires continuing preparedness and attention from the students. The weekly reading assignments are mandatory. The class sessions will be conducted in seminar format.
Students will write reaction papers on the reading material assigned, which makes 9 papers in total.
The class grade will be based on the following:
Reaction papers: 70 %
Participation: 30%
COURSE OUTLINE
Week 1 –March 1
Introduction to the course
Week 2 –March 8
From the Theory to History of Urban Space
Henri Lefebvre,The Production of Space, tr. by D. Nicholson-Smith(Blackwell, 1991). pp. 1-67 and 401-434
Week 3–March 15
Everyday life and the urban
Henri Lefebvre, Critique of Everyday Life, vol. I, pages TBA
Week 4–March 22
Urban History: Sources and Problematiques
Lecture by the instructor
Week 5 –March 29
Modernity and Urbanism in Eastern Europe
Mark D. Steinberg,Petersburg Fin De Siècle(Yale University Press, 2011)
Week6-7–April 12(1-weekinterval)
Modernity and Urbanism in Western Europe
David Harvey, Paris, Capital of Modernity (Routledge, 2003)
Week 8-9–April 26(1-week interval)
Was there such a thing as the typical Ottoman city?
Mark Mazower, Salonica, City of Ghosts: Christians, Muslims, and Jews, 1430-1950 (HarperCollins, 2005), pp. 1-285
Week10–May 3
Everyday life in the Ottoman capital
Cem Behar, A neighborhood in Ottoman Istanbul: fruit vendors and civil servants in the KasapİlyasMahalle(State University of New York Press, 2003)
Week 11–May 10
BetweenEmpire and Nation-State:Ottoman Transitions and Urban Space
Miloš Jovanović, “Constructing the National Capital: De-Ottomanization and Urban Transformation in 19th Century Belgrade”, Master's Thesis, Central European University, 2008.
Sabine Bitter and Helmut Weber, ed. AutogestionorHenriLefebvre in New Belgrade (Philip EditionsandSternbergPress, 2009)
Week12-13 –May 24(1-weekinterval)
Vienna: Intellectuals and Masses
Oktar Türel, Uzun 19. Yüzyılda Orta Avrupa(Bir Habsburg Üçlemesi)(YordamKitap, 2015), pp.11-79
Wolfgang Maderthanerand Lutz Musner. Unruly Masses: The Other Side of Fin-de-siècle Vienna(New York, Berghahn Books: 2008)
Week 14–June 2
Notables, Commonersand the Question of Autonomy in Ottoman Cities
Stefan Weber,Damascus. Ottoman Modernity and Urban Transformation 1908-1918 (Aarhus, Aarhus University Press, 2005), pp.15-170 and 417-463