Twenty-Five Women Who Shaped the Ottoman Empire

Twenty-Five Women Who Shaped the Ottoman Empire

  • Ruth Miller
Publisher:Taylor & FrancisISBN 13: 9781040313299ISBN 10: 1040313299

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Twenty-Five Women Who Shaped the Ottoman Empire is written by Ruth Miller and published by Taylor & Francis. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 1040313299 (ISBN 10) and 9781040313299 (ISBN 13).

Twenty-Five Women Who Shaped the Ottoman Empire is a tale of how women’s triumphs as well as their failures shaped a global society—not despite, but because of, gender. The Ottoman Empire was among the longest-lived polities in history, stretching between the thirteenth and twentieth centuries across three continents, several seas, and scores of cities, deserts, mountain ranges, rivers, and forests. This volume provides a compendium of idiosyncratic life stories and explores how women from these eras and regions understood the shape of the world in which they lived, and how they brought their consciousness of their gender to their efforts to re-shape it. Among the questions explored in the book are how women have negotiated and constructed the public and private spheres, how to define “women’s speech” in a world mediated by men and male-dominated genres and institutions, and how women experienced their bodies as sites of politically inflected reproduction, death and decay. The book is thus an accessibly offbeat feminist overview of the field of Ottoman History that provides students, scholars, general readers, and non-specialists with insights into the lives and work of both ordinary Ottoman women and celebrated Ottoman women, women who failed despite their best efforts and women who succeeded against all odds—suicides, spies and murderers as well as queens, scientists and poets.