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Cornell U Grows As Hub For Ottoman And Turkish Studies

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  • Cornell U Grows As Hub For Ottoman And Turkish Studies

    CORNELL GROWS AS HUB FOR OTTOMAN AND TURKISH STUDIES

    Cornell Chronicle
    March 31 2015

    By Linda B. Glaser

    Turkish election posters show candidates dressed in Ottoman Empire
    clothes. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan declares that Ottoman
    Turkish study should be mandatory for all schoolchildren.

    "The Turkish government is trying to reclaim the Ottoman past as a
    way to exert power well beyond the borders of Turkey," says Mostafa
    Minawi, assistant professor of history and director of Cornell's
    Ottoman and Turkish Studies Initiative (OTSI) in the College of Arts
    and Sciences. "Turkey is trying to become a regional power in part by
    drawing on the complicated Ottoman histories of the region, and thus
    a deep understanding of Turkey and the Ottoman Empire is essential
    in order to put this into context."

    As a growing hub for Ottoman and Turkish studies, OTSI - a part of the
    Cornell Institute for European Studies - has hosted a wide range of
    educational events this year, with more to come this spring. OTSI's
    goal is to engage students, faculty and the community at large in
    discussion of the region's political, cultural, economic and historic
    dimensions, says Minawi, a Himan Brown Sesquicentennial Faculty
    Fellow. The Ottoman Empire covered three continents for around
    600 years (1922 is its official end date) and its former sphere of
    influence is at the center of many of the world's most difficult
    current conflicts.

    "I'm delighted to see OTSI taking shape here at Cornell. The
    initiative concerns a part of the world that is of growing importance
    in geopolitical terms," says Fredrik Logevall, vice provost for
    international affairs. "We have real and expanding strengths in Ottoman
    and Turkish studies on campus, and OTSI helps to harness that in a
    powerful way."

    This year's OTSI theme is World War I in the Ottoman Empire, and in
    addition to a course on the topic, OTSI has sponsored and co-sponsored
    events across campus, including movie screenings and lectures. Two
    more events are scheduled this spring: Fatma Muge Göcek (University
    of Michigan) will speak on "Denial of Violence: Ottoman Past, Turkish
    Present, and Collective Violence against the Armenians" on April 7;
    Eugene Rogan (Oxford University) will speak on "The Arab Experience of
    the Ottoman Great War" by focusing on Beirut on April 21. Both lectures
    will be held in 110 White Hall at 5 pm and are co-sponsored by the
    Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies and the Department of
    Near Eastern Studies.

    Turkish studies and language have long been a priority of the
    Near Eastern studies department, notes Lauren Monroe, chair and
    associate professor of Near Eastern studies. "We are delighted that
    OTSI is providing a multidisciplinary platform to discuss, share and
    promote the academic study of the Ottoman Empire and its successor
    nation-states, and we are enthusiastic about and eager to support
    OTSI's rich and diverse programming."

    OTSI has also partnered with the Law School's Clarke Initiative for
    Law and Development in the Middle East and the Einaudi Center on
    a project to help sponsor Law School students' volunteer work with
    Syrian, Iraqi and Sudanese refugees in Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey.

    OTSI will again collaborate with the Clarke Initiative, and with
    Weill Cornell Medical College in an October conference in New York
    City that will examine the catastrophic refugee crisis in the Middle
    East. While the focus will be mostly on Syrian refugees, panels are
    also planned on topics such as Palestinians as protracted refugees
    and the "rarely mentioned" refugees from east Africa.

    "The conference will tackle real issues on the practical, as well as
    the academic levels with experts on a number of dimensions of this
    complex problem, including nationality, history, health, economics
    and gender," says Minawi.

    Linda B. Glaser is a writer for the College of Arts and Sciences.

    http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/2015/03/cornell-grows-hub-ottoman-and-turkish-studies

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