Living Through Wartime

IF 0.1 4区 社会学 0 ASIAN STUDIES Archiv Orientalni Pub Date : 2021-02-16 DOI:10.47979/AROR.J.88.3.449-472
N. V. Os
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Abstract

Archival sources, but also self-narratives, newspapers, and periodicals, have been im- portant sources for political and military historians of the last two decennia of the Ot- toman Empire in general and the First World War in particular. In recent years, an increasing number of historians have become interested in more than the political and military history of the period. The field has been broadened to include social history. Conventional sources have been reread to get a better understanding of the effects of the War on the social domains and everyday life. Self-narratives have proven to be in- valuable sources for social historians working on the period. These self-narratives were not only produced by the men in charge, but by people from all walks of life: soldiers and civilians, men and women noted down their wartime experiences in their diaries or letters home and in memoirs and autobiographies. In most cases, the self-narratives used by historians were, however, those written by men in which women were objecti- fied. In this paper, the self-narratives of women living in the Ottoman Empire during the First World War are preliminarily explored to give them a voice and turn them into subjects rather than objects.
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经历战争
档案资料,还有自我叙述、报纸和期刊,一直是研究奥斯曼帝国过去二十年,特别是第一次世界大战的政治和军事历史学家的重要资料来源。近年来,越来越多的历史学家对这一时期的政治和军事历史感兴趣。这一领域已扩大到包括社会历史。为了更好地理解战争对社会领域和日常生活的影响,人们重新阅读了传统资料。自述已被证明是研究这一时期的社会历史学家的宝贵资料。这些自我叙述不仅是由负责的人写的,而且来自各行各业的人:士兵和平民,男人和女人,在他们的日记、家书、回忆录和自传中记下了他们的战争经历。然而,在大多数情况下,历史学家使用的自我叙述是由男性撰写的,其中女性被客观化。本文对一战时期生活在奥斯曼帝国的女性的自我叙事进行了初步探讨,赋予她们发声的权利,使她们从客体变成主体。
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Archiv Orientalni
Archiv Orientalni Multiple-
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
26
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