Skip to content

Gotha Manuskript Talks (Online-Veranstaltung in englischer Sprache)

Wann

2. April 2025 
18:15 – 19:45

Wo

Veranstaltungstyp

Gotha Manu­script Talks: The Social Effects and Vanis­hing Traces of Pam­phlets and Other Eph­eme­ral Texts in the Early Modern Otto­man Empire.

Online-Ver­an­stal­tung mit Prof. Nir Shafir (Uni­ver­sity of Cali­for­nia, San Diego) in eng­li­scher Spra­che unter der Lei­tung von Dr. Feras Krimsti (For­schungs­bi­blio­thek Gotha) und Prof. Dr. Kon­rad Hirsch­ler (Uni­ver­si­tät Hamburg).

Ver­an­stal­ter: For­schungs­bi­blio­thek Gotha in Zusam­men­ar­beit mit dem Centre for the Study of Manu­script Cul­tures der Uni­ver­si­tät Hamburg.

 

In the seven­te­enth cen­tury, Mus­lims in the Otto­man Empire became embroi­led in a pola­ri­zing cul­tu­ral war over the per­mis­si­bi­lity of ever­y­day prac­ti­ces like wor­ship­ping at saints’ gra­ves, smo­king tob­acco, and an odd medi­cal pro­ce­dure cal­led “chick­pea cau­te­rization.” This talk traces this wide­spread reli­gious and poli­ti­cal pola­rization to the rise of a new “com­mu­ni­ca­tion order,” focu­sing in par­ti­cu­lar on the advent of “pam­phlets”: short, mobile, and pole­mical tracts, all copied by hand. The talk paints a new pic­ture of the entire eco­sy­stem of books in the manu­script cul­ture of the early modern Otto­man Empire and focu­ses in par­ti­cu­lar on the pos­si­bi­lity of tra­cing eph­eme­ral works in the manu­script record.

Nir Shafir is an asso­ciate pro­fes­sor of history at UCSD whose work focu­ses on the Otto­man Empire/Middle East from 1200 to 1800. He is an occa­sio­nal con­tri­bu­tor and edi­to­rial board mem­ber of the Otto­man History Pod­cast and ser­ved as its edi­tor in 2018. His first book is tit­led The Order and Dis­or­der of Com­mu­ni­ca­tion: Pam­phlets and Pole­mics in the Seven­te­enth-Cen­tury Otto­man Empire and came out with Stan­ford Uni­ver­sity Press in October
2024.

An den Anfang scrollen