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  4. Blood Ties: Religion, Violence and the Politics of Nationhood in Ottoman Macedonia, 1878–1908

Blood Ties: Religion, Violence and the Politics of Nationhood in Ottoman Macedonia, 1878–1908

File(s)
9780801469800.pdf (2.42 MB)
9780801469794_epub.epub (4 MB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://doi.org/10.7298/fn32-gb19
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/103979
Collections
Cornell Open
Author
Yosmaoglu, Ipek
Abstract

The region that is today the Republic of Macedonia was long the heart of the Ottoman Empire in Europe. It was home to a complex mix of peoples and faiths who had for hundreds of years lived together in relative peace. To be sure, these people were no strangers to coercive violence and various forms of depredations visited upon them by bandits and state agents. In the final decades of the nineteenth century and throughout the twentieth century, however, the region was periodically racked by bitter conflict that was qualitatively different from previous outbreaks of violence. In Blood Ties, Ipek K. Yosmaoglu explains the origins of this shift from sporadic to systemic and pervasive violence through a social history of the “Macedonian Question.” Yosmaoglu’s account begins in the aftermath of the Congress of Berlin (1878), when a potent combination of zero-sum imperialism, nascent nationalism, and modernizing states set in motion the events that directly contributed to the outbreak of World War I and had consequences that reverberate to this day. Focusing on the experience of the inhabitants of Ottoman Macedonia during this period, Yosmaoğlu shows how communal solidarities broke down, time and space were rationalized, and the immutable form of the nation and national identity replaced polyglot, fluid associations that had formerly defined people’s sense of collective belonging. The region was remapped; populations were counted and relocated. An escalation in symbolic and physical violence followed, and it was through this process that nationalism became an ideology of mass mobilization among the common folk. Yosmaoğlu argues that national differentiation was a consequence, and not the cause, of violent conflict in Ottoman Macedonia.

Date Issued
2013
Publisher
Cornell University Press
Keywords
European History
•
Slavic Studies
ISBN
9780801452260 (print)
9780801469794 (epub)
9780801469800 (PDF ebook)
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Rights URI
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Type
book
Accessibility Feature
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structuralNavigation
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none
Accessibility Summary
"Accessibility Feature(s)" apply only to the EPUB file.

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