Event

Imperialism and Ethnology: The Ottoman Case

Date
28 Feb 2025
Time
16:00 UK time
Speakers
Giancarlo Casale
Where
History Faculty, Room TBC, George Street OX1 2RL
Series
Global & Imperial History Research Seminar
Audience
Members of the University only
Booking
Not required
Historians have long asserted the close connection between ethnology—the practice of systematically describing cultural differences—and the politics of imperial domination. But in this respect, the Ottoman Empire presents an apparent paradox. Despite expanding across a territory that encompassed all or part of over 30 modern nation-states, early Ottoman authors almost avoided describing the cultural diversity of the empire’s subject peoples. Instead, they began to do so at the end of the seventeenth century—long before the onset of Western modernity, but long after the end of Ottoman imperial expansion. How can this apparent paradox be explained? And what lessons might it hold not only for Ottoman history but for a more general understanding of the relationship between knowledge and empire in the early modern world?