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Becoming Ottomans: Sephardi Jews and Imperial Citizenship in the Modern Era

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The Ottoman-Jewish story has long been told as a romance between Jews and the empire. The prevailing view is that Ottoman Jews were protected and privileged by imperial policies and in return offered their unflagging devotion to the imperial government over many centuries. In this book, Julia Phillips Cohen offers a corrective, arguing that Jewish leaders who promoted this vision were doing so in response to a series of reforms enacted by the nineteenth-century Ottoman state: the new equality they gained came with a new set of expectations. Ottoman subjects were suddenly to become imperial citizens, to consider their neighbors as brothers and their empire as a homeland.

Becoming Ottomans is the first book to tell the story of Jewish political integration into a modern Islamic empire. It begins with the process set in motion by the imperial state reforms known as the Tanzimat, which spanned the years 1839-1876 and legally emancipated the non-Muslims of the empire. Four decades later the situation was difficult to recognize. By the close of the nineteenth century, Ottoman Muslims and Jews alike regularly referred to Jews as a model community, or millet-as a group whose leaders and members knew how to serve their state and were deeply engaged in Ottoman politics. The struggles of different Jewish individuals and groups to define the public face of their communities is underscored in their responses to a series of important historical events.

Charting the dramatic reversal of Jews in the empire over a half-century, Becoming Ottomans offers new perspectives for understanding Jewish encounters with modernity and citizenship in a centralizing, modernizing Islamic state in an imperial, multi-faith landscape.

Author: Phillips Cohen Julia
Publisher: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 256
ISBN: 9780190610708
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2017

Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction: Becoming a Model Millet
1. Lessons in Imperial Citizenship
2. On the Streets and in the Synagogue: Celebrating 1892 as Ottomans
3. Battling Neighbors: Imperial Allegiance and Politicized Violence
4. Contest and Conflict: Jewish Ottomanism in a Constitutional Regime
Conclusion: Imperial Citizens Beyond the Empire
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Julia Phillips Cohen is Associate Professor of History and Jewish Studies at Vanderbilt University.

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