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Hajdarpasic: Reflections on the Ottoman Legacy in South-eastern Europe

Tags: papers, europe, Post-Ottoman Near East, bosnia

Talks about the nationalist power of Ottoman narratives, especially in light of places like Albania, Macedonia, etc.

Concludes with that the idea of ‘Ottoman ruins’ and ‘countries emerging from the ruins’ is fundalmentally flawed, there is more for the past to teach us

Making Ottoman synonmyous with Islamic or Turkish influences is a defining hallmark of the 19th century Balkan nationalist projects that perceived the Ottoman Empire as a ‘religiously, socially, and institutionally alien imposition on autochthonous Christian medieval socities. - pg 717

  • The conflation of ‘Turk’, ‘Mohammedan’, and ‘Muslim’ helps to stigmatize by lumping diverse ‘Islam’ into a generalized set of cultural characterists
  • Influencial public figures in modern Serbia helped reproduce images of converts to Islam as traitors - pg 718
  • Balkan nations defined themselves against the Ottoman background
  • The Balkan idea puts a lot of stress on the ‘Muslim vs Christian’ tension
  • Later Bosian Muslims romanticized the Ottoman period as a way to reclaim Bosnia Mulsim cultural traditions while inserting them within the Austro-Hungarian and Yugoslav political frameworks - pg 724
    • Backfires, this self-justifying stance provided the Serbs and Croats a way out, stating that the Ottoman past and legacy were solely shared by the Bosnians
  • Bosnian reclamation of the Ottoman heritage is atypical when compared to mustafa kemal
    • Bosnian version is very romanticized and valoried

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