War and Nationalism

UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESSISBN: 9781607812401

The Balkan Wars, 1912-1913, and Their Sociopolitical Implications

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By M. Hakan Yauvuz
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS
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Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:
150 g
Pages:
932

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M. Hakan Yavuz is a professor of political science at The University of Utah. He is the editor of War and Diplomacy: The Russo-Turkish War of 1877-878 and the Treaty of Berlin (The University of Utah Press, 2011). Isa Blumi is an associate professor of history at Georgia State University and a Senior Research Fellow for the Centre for Area Studies at Leipzig University. He is the author of Reinstating the Ottoman Empire and Foundations of Modernity.

List of Illustrations A Note on Transliteration Foreword by Edward J. Erickson Foreword by Peter von Sivers Acknowledgments Introduction: Lasting Consequences of the Balkan Wars (1912-1913) - Isa Blumi and M. Hakan Yavuz Part I - The Origins of the Balkan Wars 1. Warfare and Nationalism: The Balkan Wars as the Catalyst of Homogenization - M. Hakan Yavuz 2. Bulgaria and the Origins of the Balkan Wars 1912-1913 - Richard C. Hall 3. Young Turk Policy of Macedonia: Cause of the Balkan Wars? - Mehmet Hacisalihoglu 4. Rebels with a Cause: Armenian Macedonian Relations, 1890-1913 - Garabet Moumdjian 5. The Balkan War of 1912: An Assessment of Responsibilities - Feroze Yasemee 6. Epidemic Diseases seen in the Traceian Front of the Ottoman Empire During the Balkans - Oya M. Daglar Part II - External Influences and Consequences 7. Ottoman Diplomacy and the Origins of the Balkan Wars - Gul Tokay 8. Austria-Hungary's struggle for status quo and the Serb and Montenegrin Propaganda in Sandzak Novi Pazar (1879-1908) - Tamara Scheer 9. The Balkan Wars in the Perspective of the European Powers: The Italian Case - Francesco Caccamo 10. Between Cross and Crescent: British Diplomacy and Press OpinionToward the Ottoman Empire in Resolving the Balkan Wars, 1912-1913 - Pamela Dorn Sezgin Part III - Transforming Ottoman Society 11. The Balkan Wars and the Turkish Women's Movement - Serpil Atamaz 12. And the Awakening Came as a Result of the Balkan War: The Changing Conceptualization of the Body in Late Ottoman Society - Melis Hafez 13. Making Sense of the Defeat in the Balkan Wars: Voices from the Arab Provinces - Eyal Ginio Part IV - Ethno-Religious Cleansing and Great Power Epistemologies 14. Paramilitaries in the Balkan Wars: The Case of Macedonian Andrianople - Sahara Tetsuya 15. Nationalism of Coercion: The Case of Pomak Christianization (Pokrasvane) in Bulgaria, 1912-1913 - Fatme M. Myuhtar-May 16. Bulgaria's Policy towards Muslims during the Balkan Wars - Neriman Hacisalihoglu 17. Perceiving the Balkan Wars: Western and Ottoman commentaries on the 1914 Carnegie Endowment Balkan Wars Inquiry - Patrick Adaimak 18. Savagery and the "Modern" State: Competency and Civilization in the Late Ottoman and Early North American Empires - Jon Schmitt Part V - Balkan States 19. Shifting Possibilities Before and After 1912: Empire to Nation-State - Isa Blumi 20. Ottoman Disintegration in the Balkans and its Repercussions - Sevtap Demirci 21. Aggressiveness of Bosnian and Herzegovinian Serbs in the Public Discourse during the Balkan Wars - Amir Duranovic Part VI - Republic of Turkey and Republican Introspection 22. Balkan Ward and Population Movement - Nedim Ipek 23. The Refugee Elite of the Early Republic of Turkey - Erik-Jan Zurcher 24. The Loss of the Lost: Selective Memory and The Construction of the Modern Turkish National Identity - Mehmet Arisan 25. The Political and Military Consequences of the Balkan Wars on the Republican Military - Dogan Akyaz 26. The Impact of the Balkan Wars on the Emergence of Modern Turkey - Preston Hughes 27. The Impacts of the Balkan Wars on the Turkish Intellectuals - Funda Selcuk Sirin 28. What Did the Albanians Do?: Post War Disputes on "Albanian Attitudes" - Cagdas SUEmer 29. More History than they Can Consume?: Perception of the Balkan Wars in the Turkish Republican Textbook (1932-2007) - Nazan Cicek Chronology Bibliography List of Contributors Index

"A very impressive collection. Not only will this be the most comprehensive volume on the Balkan Wars, but the interdisciplinary approach which it incorporates casts new light on the origins of contemporary conflicts in the Balkans."--Uli Schamiloglu, University of Wisconsin "Professors Yavuz and Blumi have edited an excellent and much needed study on the interdisciplinary aspects of the Balkan Wars (1912-1913). By avoiding nationalist narratives that came to dominate the recent scholarship, the chapters rigorously develop the social, economic, cultural, and diplomatic connections between local, regional, and European dimensions of this catastrophic event that resulted in the annihilation of the Ottoman Muslim civilization in the Balkans. This book argues for a new theoretical approach to studying the complex connections between warfare, nationalism and homogenization. This book is more so a study of the patterns of the nation-building than a military history. It is a must read for the Balkan and Ottoman specialists and students of nationalism."--Ilber Ortayli, Galatasaray University, Istanbul and the author of Discovering the Ottomans "War and Nationalism is the second volume in this series, which covers the causes, course and consequences of the end of the Ottoman Turkish empire. It had famously been multi-ethnic and multi-religious, and its destruction was accompanied by mass deportations, what we have learned to call ethnic cleansing, and vicious murder. This volume's originality lies in its demonstration that the first instance of this came with Greek independence, and that the model was then adapted to the rest of the Ottoman Balkans and then to Anatolia itself. The articles are of high quality, bringing various elements of history--social, intellectual, diplomatic and economic--together to present a coherent narrative of these tragedies."--Norman Stone, Bilkent University and author of The Eastern Front 1914-1917 "War and Nationalism offers a new perspective on understanding the process of nation-building in the Balkans at the end of the nineteenth century. It indicates very clearly that war-making became an effective agent of homogenization through ethnic cleansing and mass killing. A number of papers argue that the Ottoman military defeat and the deportation of so many Muslims from southeastern Europe, and the destruction of long-established Muslim communities, radicalized the Young Turks and helped to create a revanchist (rather than nationalist) political atmosphere. Ottoman public opinion concluded that the very existence of the Ottoman state was in the balance, and that they needed a major ally. This is a large part of the explanation for the Ottomans' decision to enter the First World War. This book offers a clear and original narrative of the social and political implications of the Balkan Wars."--Peter Sluglett, President of the Middle East Studies Association of North America, 2012-13, Visiting Research Professor, Middle East Institute, National University of Singapore "Those with an interest in and familiarity with the south Balkans will find real merit in these papers."--CHOICE

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