This essay is, in part, an attempt to consider how these real and imagined Ottoman geographies are underpinned by the histories and afterlives of exploitation, exploration, and conquest.
I am less concerned with retrieving these histories to identify Ottoman-era diversity or to place the African diaspora within a mosaic of Ottoman Istanbul. Rather, I am interested in how reading Arap Bacı and her histories as intimately connected to the production of space might help reframe the study of Istanbul—as well as the Ottoman Empire—and its multilayered relationship to slavery and the African diaspora. Here, the production of space is understood to be co-constituted by both real and imagined geographies. That Arap Bacı cannot be located in Istanbul (and its study)—despite the city (as urban space/place, as seat of imperial power) being central to her domination (the slave market, the harem, the elite house)—but can be conjured within the theatrical shadows of an imagined Istanbul, perhaps, evinces the need to further interrogate the co-constitution of space and how geographies and knowledge production are interconnected.
MECLİS, Ottoman Geography, Ottoman Istanbul, Diaspora, African
Primary Language | English |
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Subjects | Cultural Studies, History |
Journal Section | Meclis |
Authors | |
Thanks | I thank Cemal Kafadar for the invitation to share a part of my research, the careful eyes and suggestions of K. Mehmet Kentel and Miray Eroglu, as well as the advice from Michael Gomez and Zachary Lockman. This article has also greatly benefited from many conversations with Beeta Baghoolizadeh, Khemani Gibson, Ali Karjoo-Ravary, Taylor Moore, Eve Troutt Powell, and Briana Royster. |
Publication Date | December 30, 2021 |
Submission Date | September 1, 2021 |
Acceptance Date | |
Published in Issue | Year 2021 Volume: 3 |