home page
About Us | e-Gorgias Newsletter | At Conferences | Authors | Co-Publishing Services | Book Grants | Career Opportunities | Staff  



MyGorgias Account | My Wish List | Recommendations for me | My Cart  
   Home | Antioch Bible | Best Sellers | Just Published | Journals | Series | Gorgias Dissertations | Advanced Search | Contact Us | Join Mailing List    Login   

Hello, we invite you to login to see your personalized BiblioPicks (book recommendations).



New! Check out our New Search Engine, powered by Google!
Travel & Missionary - Ellison, Grace. An Englishwoman in a Turkish Harem  

Search:

 American Christianity
 Ancient Near East
 Anthropology
 Arabic & Islamic Studies
 Armenian Studies
 Ascetical & Monastic
 Assyrian Studies, Modern
 Biblical Studies
 Bookends & Paraphernalia
 Byzantium
 Central Asian Studies
 Children's Books
 Chinese Studies
 Christian Arabic
 Church History
 Classics
 Coptic & Egyptian Studies
 Dead Sea Scrolls
 Eastern Christianity
 Egyptology
 Ethics
 Ethiopic
 Euphrates Imprint
 European Studies
 Evangelism
 Finance and Economics
 Genocide Studies
 Hebrew & Judaica
 Historical Fiction
 Journals
 Linguistics
 Literature
 Liturgy
 Mandaic
 Manuscript Studies
 Medieval Studies
 Middle East
 Music
 Neo-Aramaic
 Ottoman & Turkish Studies
 Pastoral Studies
 Patristics
 Philosophy & Theology
 Reference
 Religion
 Series
 Spirituality
 Subscriptions
 Syriac
 Tigris Imprint
 Travel & Missionary
 Ugaritic
 Women's Studies
 Youth Ministry

Download Patristics Book List 2011 (PDF)
Download Catalog (PDF)
Download Library Catalog (PDF)
Download Syriac and Eastern Christianity Catalog (PDF)
Download Gorgias Press 10th Anniversary Catalog (PDF, 5MB)
Download G&C Kiraz Catalog (PDF, 4MB)
Contact Us
Site Map
Return Policy
Shipping Info
Gorgias Projects


      

Buy this book together with Aramaic (Syriac) Grammar by Thomas Arayathinal
Grace Ellison (d. 1935) actively encouraged dialogues between Turkish and British women at the outset of the twentieth century. Connected with progressive Ottoman elites discussing female and social emancipation, Ellison stayed in an Ottoman harem. Working as a respected journalist, she published articles about British-Turkish relations, Turkish nationalism, and the status of women across cultures. This book recounts Ellison’s stay with her friend Fâtima and features reports on motherhood, employment, polygamy, slavery, harem life, modernization, veiling, and prominent women writers. Despite an impressive legacy, Ellison and her work have almost disappeared from the historical record; the republication of this 1915 work aims to address this neglect.+Arayathinal’s grammar is among the most comprehensive Syriac grammars ever produced.  Designed as a teaching text, this volume is also a solid reference grammar for use by advanced scholars and beginners alike.Save $61.13
Total List Price: $407.50
Buy both books for only $346.38

Quantity:  
 

Customers who bought this book also bought:

History of Syria, Including Lebanon and Palestine by
A detailed history of Syria, Lebanon, and Palestine from the earliest times until the 20th century.

Quantity:   

A Pilgrimage to Nejd, The Cradle of the Arab Race by
This book documents the journey of Lady Anne Blunt (d. 1917) to Arabia in 1875. Hunt was a talented artist and the founder of the famous Crabbet Stud of England.

Quantity:   

Meccan Trade and the Rise of Islam by
Patricia Crone reassesses one of the most widely accepted dogmas in contemporary accounts of the beginnings of Islam: the supposition that Mecca was a trading center. In addition, she seeks to elucidate sources on which we should reconstruct our picture of the birth of the new religion in Arabia.

Quantity:   

The Plagues of Egypt by
Molecular biologist Siro Trevisanato assembles data gleaned from a variety of ancient texts and a wide range of scientific disciplines to assist in a reconsideration of the ten plagues recorded in the Biblical book of Exodus.

Quantity:   

Printing Charge by

Quantity:   
previous | up | next
 
Ellison, Grace. An Englishwoman in a Turkish Harem  

 E-mail this product to a friend

Title:An Englishwoman in a Turkish Harem
Subtitle:New Introduction by Teresa Heffernan and Reina Lewis
Series:Cultures in Dialogue 11
Availability:In Print
Publisher:Gorgias Press

By Grace Ellison
ISBN:978-1-59333-211-2
Availability:In Print
Publication Date:2/2007
From the 1915 edition
Language:English
Format:Hardback, Black, 6 x 9 in
Pages:288
 

Grace Ellison (d. 1935) actively encouraged dialogues between Turkish and British women at the outset of the twentieth century. Connected with progressive Ottoman elites discussing female and social emancipation, Ellison introduced Melek Hanoum and Zeyneb Hanoum to a British audience, (see this series) and together, they stayed in Ottoman harems, Ellison herself included. Working as a respected journalist, both at home and abroad, she published articles about British-Turkish relations, Turkish nationalism, and the status of women across cultures, some of which are the basis for this book. An Englishwoman in a Turkish Harem recounts Ellison’s stay with her friend Fâtima (a pseudonym used to protect the Ottoman woman’s identity) and features reports on motherhood, employment, polygamy, slavery, harem life, modernization, veiling, and prominent women writers. While generally anti-orientalist and supportive of both national and female emancipation, Ellison sometimes found herself indulging in orientalist views, even as she worked to correct them. Her awareness of the luxury offered by elite harems, a privilege not available to her in the West, sometimes put a nostalgic spin on her depiction of Ottoman culture at odds with her approval elsewhere of the social and political reforms being introduced in early-twentieth-century Ottoman and Turkish society. However, she also valued the sense of community and protection afforded to women of Muslim societies, and encouraged Turkey to adopt a version of feminism that held onto some of these Eastern traditions, rather than abandon them and mimic an individualistic Western model. Her expertise allowed her to correct Western prejudices about Turks, while her professional status in Turkey meant that she was the first Westerner allowed to cross enemy lines in the 1920s, to visit the nationalists in Ankara and to interview Mustafa Kemal. Despite an impressive legacy, Ellison and her work have almost disappeared from the historical record; the republication of this 1915 work aims to address this neglect.




Ellison, Grace. An Englishwoman in a Turkish Harem
ISBN:978-1-59333-211-2
Weight:1 LBS.
Price:$85.00

Quantity:   



Product Rating: (0.00)   # of Ratings: 0   (Only registered customers can rate)

There are no comments for this product.

  
Home | Affiliates | Privacy Policy | Copyright © 2003-2005. All Rights Reserved.
Powered by Gorgias FolioFlow, a comprehensive e-commerce solution.