Xenophobia-flyer - University of Chicago
Transkript
Xenophobia-flyer - University of Chicago
The University of Chicago Thursday, October 22 9:00 Hakan Karateke | Welcome address Xenophobia and Alterophobia in Pre-Modern Ottoman Lands Thursday, October 22 Friday, October 23, 2015 Franke Institute for the Humanities 1100 East 57th Street; Regenstein Library Building Organized by Hakan Karateke, Helga Anetshofer, 9:15 David Nirenberg | Keynote speech Morning panels chair: Holly Shissler 9:45-10:15 Bilha Moor | Northwestern University The Jew and the European in Ottoman eyes; ca. 15501700 10:15-10:45 Hakan Karateke | University of Chicago Upper-class Ottomans’ views on Jews 3:30-4:00 Basil Salem | University of Chicago “Arab” identity in the eighteenth-century Ottoman Empire 4:00-4:30 Michael Sheridan | Bilkent University Defining and defaming the other in early 17th-century Ottoman invective Friday, October 23 11:15-11:45 Orit Bashkin | University of Chicago How does Rome look in the eyes of the people of Hebron? 11:45-12:15 Konrad Petrovszky | Vienna University “Those disrespectful of our customs” – Patterns of popular and gentile aversion against the “Greeks” in the Danubian principalities; 16th–18th centuries Morning panels chair: Ahmed El Shamsy 10:00-10:30 Emin Lelic | University of Chicago The greatest of tribulations: Constructions of femininity in sixteenth century Ottoman physiognomy 10:30-11:00 Helga Anetshofer | Univ. of Chicago “Are you from Çorum?” Derogatory attitudes towards the “unruly mob” of the provinces as reflected in a proverbial saying 11:00-11:30 Baki Tezcan | UC Davis A comparative look at Africans in Ottoman letters in the 17th and 18th centuries Lunch Lunch Afternoon panels chair: Frank Lewis 2:00-2:30 Vjeran Kursar | University of Zagreb Ambiguous subjects and uneasy neighbours: Bosnian Franciscans’ attitudes towards Ottoman state, “Turks”, and Vlachs 2:30-3:00 Helen Pfeifer | University of Cambridge Bitter sherbet: Rumis and Arabs in the later sixteenth century Afternoon panels chair: Baki Tezcan 1:30-2:00 İpek Hüner | University of Chicago “Infidel” in the early modern Ottoman fiction 2:00-2:30 Erdem Çıpa | University of Michigan Changing perceptions about Christian-born Ottomans: Anti-kul sentiments in Ottoman historiography 3:00-3:30 Coffee break 2:30-3:30 Final discussion 10:45-11:15 Coffee break Steirische Völkertafel | A brief description of the people in Europe and their characteristics | Early 18th century