'The 20th century history of the Balkans cannot be understood without the careful analysis of its late- and post-Ottoman complexities of societal life. The marvellously composed volume offers surprising insights into a variety of social spheres, where local actors were exposed to contradicting constraints of multiple, restricted and competing loyalties.' - Professor Karl Kaser, Centre for Southeast European History, University of Graz; 'The historiography of Ottoman rule in the Balkans has successfully projected the image of an oppressive regime, culturally foreign to the region and a hindrance to social and economic development. Reflecting and reproducing the orientalist discourse pervasive in Western thought, this perspective has posited in the last analysis a civilisational contradiction between a stagnant and despotic East and a progressist and liberal West. What is needed are fresh approaches to the study of state-society relations, of everyday life in urban centres, in the core provinces as well as on the periphery of the empire, of the modalities of mental mapping and interregional networking, and of the ways in which intermediary groups influenced the formation of confessional, ethnic and national identities.The papers brought together in this volume address all these issues. They represent a revisionary effort to grasp and illustrate the basically fluid and ambiguous character of power relationships, political loyalties and boundaries of social belonging in late- and post-Ottoman Balkans. Many a nationalist myth is deconstructed in the process, and the veracity of master narratives are disputed convincingly.' - Dr. Fikret Adanir, Professor of History, Sabanci University, Istanbul
[Taken from proposal: awaiting manuscript for revised ToC]
Introduction
PART 1: JANUS-FACED EUROPEANISATION
Vagrants, Prostitutes and Bosnians: Making and Unmaking European Supremecy in Ottoman Southeast Europe
Malte Furhmann
Schools for the Descruction of Society: School Propaganda in Bitola 1860-1912
Bernard Lory
Amateurs as Nation Builders? The Significance of Associations for the fomration and Nationalisation of Greek Society in the Nineteenth Century
Ioannis Zelepos
PART 2: AMBIGUOUS ACTORS, CONFLICTING STRATEGIES
The Dimensions of Confessionalisation in the Ottoman Balkans at the Time of Nationalisms
Nathalie Clayer
Violent Social Disintegration: A Nation-Building Strategy in Late-Ottoman Herzegovina
Hannes Grandits
In the Service of the Sultan, in the Service of the Revolution: Local Bulgarian Notables in the 1870s
Alexander Vezenkov
PART 3: REFRAINED LOYALTIES
The Mobilisation of the Ottoman Jewish Population during the Balkan Wars (1912-3)
Eyal Ginio
Catholic Albanian Warriors for the Sultan in Late-Ottoman Kosovo
Eva Anne Frantz
PART 4: ELITE PROJECTS, DIVERGENT REALITIES
Mission, Power and Violence: Serbia's National Turn
Natasa Miskovic
Nationalism at (Symbolic) Work: Social Disintegration and the National Turn in Melnik and Stanimaka
Galia Valtchinova
Conclusion