E519 | The expulsion of Sephardic Jews from the Iberian Peninsula and their arrival in the Ottoman Empire thereafter changed the relationship of Jewish communities to the Ottoman state. The history of Ottoman Jews would become part and parcel of narrative that contrasted the Ottoman Empire's beneficence and tolerance with the anti-Semitism of other European societies. Yet as Marc Baer explains in this second part of a two-part conversation, the image of "Sultanic saviors" became entangled with the denial not only of anti-Semitism in Turkey but also of violence against non-Muslims in the late Ottoman Empire and the Armenian Genocide. Adopting a history of emotions approach, Baer explores the reasons for the erasure of violence and persecution in the memory of the Ottoman Empire's relationship with non-Muslims and uses the sentiments that animate this historiography and memory as a starting point for a way forward.
More at https://www.ottomanhistorypodcast.com/2022/01/baer2.html
Marc David Baer is Professor of International History at the London School of Economics and Political Science. His research interests include religious conversion, gender and sexuality, and interreligious relations and state violence in the Ottoman Empire, Greece, Turkey, and Germany.
Zeinab Azarbadegan is the post-doctoral fellow at the Vienna School of International Studies. She completed her PhD at Columbia University. Her research focuses on imperial knowledge production about the space of Ottoman Iraq by the Ottomans, the Qajars, and the British in the late nineteenth century.
CREDITS
Episode 519
Release Date: 29 January 2022
Audio editing by Zeinab Azarbadegan
Music: A.A. Aalto; Chad Crouch; Haim Effendi - Aben Yakir li Efraim; Isaac Algazi - Adonai Chamahti
Bibliography courtesy of Marc Baer available at https://www.ottomanhistorypodcast.com/2022/01/baer2.html
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