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PALMIRA BRUMMETT, Image and Imperialism in theOttoman Revolutionary Press, 1908–1911 (Albany: State University of New YorkPress, 2000). Pp. 489. $86.50 cloth, $29.95 paper.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2002

Abstract

The reader plunges into the whirlwind of revolution in this study of the satirical press that circulated after the Young Turks reinstated the Ottoman constitution in 1908. The brave new world depicted in the more than one hundred cartoons reprinted in this work is headed in unknown and often paradoxical directions: we see starving peasants confront fur-coated revolutionaries; dragon-headed despots leading Lady Liberty by the arm; cadaverous cholera victims patrolling the streets; and a woman steering an airplane above the revolutionary city of the future. The 1908 revolution will never look quite the same to readers familiar with the (still scant) treatment of the subject in the English language. Palmira Brummett addresses her innovative study not only to revisionist historians of the late Ottoman period, but also to a wider community of scholars interested in the history of publishing and the construction of identity in the Middle East, Europe, and elsewhere.

Type
Book Review
Copyright
© 2002 Cambridge University Press

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