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Öğe ARMENIANS IN THE DERSIM REGION BEFORE 1915: A GLIMPSE OF THEHISTORY OF THE MIRAKIAN TRIBE(I B Tauris & Co Ltd, 2016) Gundogdu, Cihangir[Abstract Not Available]Öğe Becoming Ottomans: Sephardi Jews and Imperial Citizenship in the Modern Era(Isam, 2016) Gundogdu, Cihangir[Abstract Not Available]Öğe Dogs Feared and Dogs Loved: Human-Dog Relations in the Late Ottoman Empire(Brill, 2023) Gundogdu, CihangirThe current study investigates human-animal relations with a specific focus on the case of dogs in the late Ottoman Empire. It contextualizes the new type of animal -human relations against the backdrop of the Ottoman modernization efforts, which took the form of institutional, legal, political and social reforms, and relates the adoption of dogs as pet (companion) animals to the global trends of keeping pets in Western Europe. In so doing, it scrutinizes the various religious, medical and profes-sional perspectives concerning dogs and the human world in the late Ottoman Empire; the purchase and transfer of breed dogs from Europe and the middle classes' responses to this new form of relationship; and finally, the dissemination of pet-keeping culture and practices among Ottoman upper and middle classes.Öğe An intellectual history of Turkish nationalism: between Turkish ethnicity and Islamic identity(Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2016) Gundogdu, Cihangir[Abstract Not Available]Öğe Ottoman death registers (Vefeyat Defterleri) and recording deaths in Istanbul, 1838-1839(Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2020) Balsoy, Gulhan; Gundogdu, CihangirThis article presents an analysis of the first recognisably modern-style death registers in the Ottoman Empire. These were produced, in 1838-9, as a result of the state's reaction to the cholera pandemic of 1831. This article shows how these registers were designed and structured, how they differed to those that preceded and came after them and so occupied a key point in the transition to the medicalisation of death and the import of Western-style statistical analysis. The article demonstrates how these registers offer details that can be used to build a picture of the social, economic and demographic profile of death in Istanbul in these years.Öğe Prisons in the Late Ottoman Empire: Microcosms of Modernity(Univ Chicago Press, 2017) Gundogdu, Cihangir[Abstract Not Available]Öğe The state and the stray dogs in late Ottoman Istanbul: from unruly subjects to servile friends(Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2018) Gundogdu, CihangirThe present article situates the systemic efforts to annihilate stray dogs within the wider picture of Ottoman modernizing reforms in the nineteenth century. The period under investigation witnessed an increasing desire on the part of the modern Ottoman state to control and reform disenfranchised human and animal groups, which were believed to jeopardize public order, security and hygiene. These groups - beggars, orphans and the unemployed - were identified as actors irreconcilable with the modern image that the reforming bureaucracy and modernizing elites sought to project. In the face of increasing challenges from European powers, they were the epitome of underdevelopment and backwardness. Ottoman elites and official authorities therefore proposed and implemented institutional measures in the form of forced labor, reformatories or deportation to reform the conditions of these groups, segregate them from the greater public and discipline them. In the modern period, along with the proposals that called for the removal of dogs, modernizing intellectuals and professionals proposed alternative plans to render non-human animals beneficial to human needs and the modern state's expectations.