ABSTRACT

Istanbul – Kushta – Constantinople presents twelve studies that draw on contemporary life narratives that shed light on little explored aspects of nineteenth-century Ottoman Istanbul. As a broad category of personal writing that goes beyond the traditional confines of the autobiography, life narratives range from memoirs, letters, reports, travelogues and descriptions of daily life in the city and its different neighborhoods. By focusing on individual experiences and perspectives, life narratives allow the historian to transcend rigid political narratives and to recover lost voices, especially of those underrepresented groups, including women and members of non-Muslim communities.

The studies of this volume focus on a variety of narratives produced by Muslim and Christian women, by non-Muslims and Muslims, as well as by natives and outsiders alike. They dispel European Orientalist stereotypes and cross class divides and ethnic identities. Travel accounts of outsiders provide us with valuable observations of daily life in the city that residents often overlooked.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part I|48 pages

European and Ottoman women in the empire

chapter 2|14 pages

Wanderlust, follies and self-inflicted misfortunes

The memoirs of Anna Forneris and her thirty years in Constantinople and the Levant 1

part II|47 pages

Outside observers of Istanbul

chapter 4|21 pages

Amalgamated observations

Assessing American impressions of nineteenth-century Constantinople and its peoples

chapter 5|13 pages

Istanbul and the formation of an Arab teenager’s identity

Recollections of a cadet in the Ottoman army in 1914 and 1916–1917

part IV|93 pages

Armenian and Bulgarian Christian communities

chapter 9|18 pages

A Stroll through the Quarters of Constantinople

Sketches of the city as seen through the eyes of the great satirist Hagop Baronian

chapter 10|8 pages

From short stories to social topography

Misak Koçunyan’s Life Landscapes

chapter 11|7 pages

“Bulgar Milleti Nedir?” 1

Syncretic 2 forms of belonging in mid-nineteenth-century Istanbul 3

chapter 12|58 pages

Twenty years in the Ottoman capital

The memoirs of Dr. Hristo Tanev Stambolski of Kazanlik (1843–1932) from an Ottoman point of view