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Series - Cultures in Dialogue (ISSN 1935-6994) - Ekrem, Selma. Unveiled  

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Buy this book together with Thirty Years in the Harem by Melek Hanım
Selma Ekrem grew up among the progressive Ottoman Muslim elite. Ekrem benefited from having an unconventional mother, who did not insist on her daughter's veiling. The book covers the family's sojourns outside Istanbul when her father was governor in Jerusalem during the 1908 Young Turk revolution and then governor of the Greek Archipelago Islands, where the whole family was held captive when their island was taken by the Greeks during the Balkan Wars. Returning to Istanbul just as World War I broke out, Ekrem attended the American College for Girls. Frustrated at the restrictions of Turkish female life, Ekrem traveled to America and countered prevalent stereotypes by lecturing on Turkey.+Melek Hanim, an Ottoman woman of Greek, Armenian, and French heritage, accompanied her husband to various postings in Palestine and Serbia, and shared with him the frustrations of the arbitrary periodic dismissals that characterized late Ottoman politics. Her sensationalist account of life in Turkey contains details of political intrigue and corruption and demonstrates the influence and mobility available to women in the official households of the Ottoman elite. Filled with maneuvers including murder, divorce, political machinations, and vengeance, Melek Hanim’s life was an attempt to gain access to property she viewed as legitimately her own. This book was written during her later exile in Paris.Save $25.50
Total List Price: $170.00
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Ekrem, Selma. Unveiled  

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Author: Selma Ekrem
Title: Unveiled
Subtitle: New Introduction by Carolyn Goffman
Series: Cultures in Dialogue 5
Publisher: Gorgias Press LLC
Publication Date: 9/1/2005 12:00:00 AM 1930
Availability: In Print
ISBN: 1-59333-209-2
Language: English
Format: Hardback 6 x 9, 1 volume(s), 320 pages, illustrations
Selma Ekrem was the granddaughter of Namik Kemal, the Young Ottoman playwright, whose dramatic pleas to reform the empire prompted Sultan Abdulhamit II to exile him. Growing up among the progressive Ottoman Muslim elite, Ekrem benefited from an unconventional mother, who did not insist on her daughter's veiling. The book covers the family's sojourns outside Istanbul when her father was governor in Jerusalem during the 1908 Young Turk revolution and then governor of the Greek Archipelago Islands, where the whole family was held captive on Mytiline when the island was taken by the Greeks during the Balkan Wars. Returning to Istanbul just as the First World War broke out, Ekrem attended the American College for Girls where she was one of a growing number of Muslim students. Unveiled provides a commentary on how the school's inclusive multi-ethnic studentship found itself newly divided by the split loyalties of the First World War, the Allied occupation, and the Greek invasion. Frustrated at the restrictions of Turkish female life (though a strong supporter of Mustafa Kemal), Ekrem traveled to America and earned a living giving lectures on Turkey, which countered prevalent Orientalist stereotypes.

Ekrem, Selma. Unveiled
ISBN:1-59333-209-2
Weight:1 LBS.
Price:$85.00
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