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Shattered Dreams of Revolution - by Bedross Der Matossian (Hardcover)

Shattered Dreams of Revolution - by  Bedross Der Matossian (Hardcover)
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Last Price: 85.00 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>This book considers the Ottoman Revolution of 1908 and tells the stories of Arabs, Armenians, and Jews, of how the revolution initially raised these groups' expectations but ultimately led to pessimism and a dramatic rise in ethnic tensions across the Empire.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>This book considers the Ottoman Revolution of 1908 and tells the stories of Arabs, Armenians, and Jews, of how the revolution initially raised these groups' expectations but ultimately led to pessimism and a dramatic rise in ethnic tensions across the Empire.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><i>Shattered Dreams of Revolution</i> is a compelling work on the Ottoman revolution of 1908 and its shortcomings . . . [T]his work must be commended for presenting a fresh picture of the revolution as a key event that needs to be more fully studied for its repercussions on the collapse of the Ottoman Empire. This is a work that cannot be ignored by those studying late Ottoman history and in particular how nationalism impacted the empire's subjects.--Roberto Mazza "<i>H-Net</i>"<br><br><i>Shattered Dreams of Revolution</i> is a timely book and a meticulously researched work. It locates itself in the growing field of the history of Ottoman ethnic and religious minorities, or as Der Matossian rightly prefers to refer to them, the non-dominant groups, in the nineteenth and early twentieth century . . . <i>Shattered Dreams</i> is a grappling book, an academic work of extremely high standard, which boasts impeccable and meticulous archival research in a number of languages. It is a book that sheds light on the very complicated last crucial years of the pre-war Ottoman Empire.--Stefano Taglia "<i>Middle Eastern Studies</i>"<br><br>[A] recent work by Bedross Der Matossian is valuable, for it proposes a different analogy to the Arab spring and thus casts new light on the present. <i>Shattered Dreams of Revolution From Liberty to Violence in the Late Ottoman Empire</i> is above all a work of historical scholarship, but it also makes a compelling case for looking at the Arab spring in light of the Young Turk revolution - which began with a military cou d'etat - in the Ottoman empire in 1908.--Vicken Cheterian "<i>openDemocracy</i>"<br><br>[N]o historian has approached the subject of non-dominant ethnic groups in such a comprehensive and multilingual manner as Der Matossian has done in this volume. His study of Ottoman Armenians, Arabs, and Jews in the immediate aftermath of the revolution outlines the complex nature of post-revolutionary politics and the lack of homogeneity within each of these groups . . . Highly recommended.--R.W. Zens "<i>Choice</i>"<br><br>[T]his book is an important contribution to research on the period following the Young Turk Revolution, which deserves our attention. It highly contributes to current discussions and surely will raise new ones.--Dr. Yuval Ben-Bassat "(in Hebrew) in <i>Ha-Mizrah Ha-Hadash (New East)</i>"<br><br>Bedross Der Matossian brings a valuable contribution to our understanding of both modern revolutions and late Ottoman history . . . The real value of <i>Shattered dreams of revolution</i> lies in providing a new perspective on the contemporary drama of the Middle East, by grounding its roots firmly in the region's history, revolutionary process promising freedom and equality but eventually leading to inter-community violence, a situation which strongly echoes the current state of affairs in the region.--Vicken Cheterian "<i>International Affairs</i>"<br><br>Bedross Der Matossian explains with new historical evidence why and how the Young Turk revolution ultimately failed to attract Armenians, Jews, and Arabs to its cause. He makes a genuine contribution to our understanding of ethno-religious conflict and nationalism, suggesting interesting parallels with the failings of today's Middle East revolutions.--Philip S. Khoury "Massachusetts Institute of Technology"<br><br>Bedross Der Matossian's research is a model for those interested in a multivocal treatment of the principal historiographical issues of the late Ottoman period. This is is a readable work written in a style accessible to casual readers and students, and with its detailed and extensive use of evocative quotations, <i>Shattered Dreams of Revolution</i> should prove a fascinating read for specialists as well.--Chris Gratien "<i>Arab Studies Journal</i>"<br><br>Der Matossian's <i>Shattered Dreams of Revolution: From Liberty to Violence in the Late Ottoman Empire</i>, stands out among the plethora of volumes on the events surrounding the Young Turk Revolution, as it looks at the revolution through the lenses of three nondominant groups in the empire - Armenians, Jews, and Arabs. Drawing upon a rich body of sources in at least five languages (Ottoman Turkish, Armenian, Arabic, Hebrew, and Ladino), the author provides the reader with a much richer understanding of the dynamics that brought about the revolution of 1908, as well as the postrevolutionary, counterrevolutionary, and subsequent dynamics than many other studies that have taken the Committee of Union and Progress as their primary lens of analysis.--Janet Klein "<i>International Journal of Middle East Studies</i>"<br><br>Der Matossian's work is an important and in many ways path-breaking contribution that moves our understanding of the political history of the non-Muslim and non-Turkish speaking populations of the Ottoman Empire forward beyond the tried and tired tropes of the rise of separatist nationalisms and the meddling of the Great Powers . . . In the span of less than three hundred pages, Der Matossian provides an expansive snapshot of the multiplicity of actors and of the interplay of competing interests that sometimes--but by no means always--crossed over lines of religion and ethnicity to shape politics in the empire's waning years.--David Gutman "<i>New Perspectives on Turkey</i>"<br><br>In <i>Shattered Dreams of Revolution: From Liberty to Violence in the Late Ottoman Empire</i>, historian Bedross Der Matossian addresses the fraught ethnic relations that played a significant role in the failure of the Ottoman constitutional experiment . . . Der Matossian has sought out primary sources--including newspapers, political communications, speeches, and religious sermons--which help to paint a picture of late Ottoman society unavailable in official repositories like the Ottoman Archives . . . Der Matossian's ambitious project breaks sharply from the 'microhistorical' approach employed by many scholars of the period . . . These parallels make <i>Shattered Dreams of Revolution</i> essential to a sober and honest understanding of the Middle East in the 20th century--and in the 21st.--Sam Taylor "<i>Business Insider</i>"<br><br>In this well-researched, tightly argued, and sophisticated book, Bedross Der Matossian maintains that the enormous chasm between the Weltanschauungen of the Ottom Committee of Union and Progress and of the major Armenian, Jewish, and Arab political organizations and intellectuals made any agreement on the basic tenets of the new constitutional regime impossible . . . [S]tudents of Ottoman, Armenian, Arab, and modern Jewish history will be indebted to Der Matosian for his extremely valuable contribution to the field.--M. Şükrü Hanioğlu "<i>Perspective on Politics</i>"<br><br>Taking a macro-historical approach, Matossian's work includes various regions of the Ottoman Empire . . . Matossian argues that the ideal of creating an Ottoman identity which would unite the diversity of ethnic groups under one banner is paradoxical . . . [<i>Shattered Dreams of Revolution</i> has a] valuable contribution to the literature of Second Constitutional Period as they shed light on the very first constitutional experience of the Middle Eastern communities.--Fikriye Karaman "<i>Journal of Ottoman Studies</i>"<br><br>The sad fate of revolutions, from moments of euphoria and hope through the descent into authoritarianism, has seldom been told as persuasively as in this unique book. Bedross Der Matossian offers the stories of three peoples--Armenians, Arabs, and Jews--who greeted the 1908 Young Turk revolution with joy and optimism, only to find their expectations of liberation and modernity quickly turn into disillusion and brutal bloodletting.--Ronald Grigor Suny "The University of Michigan"<br><br>This richly textured narrative addresses the alliances of convenience brokered between mutually opposing Armenian political parties out of exigency...<i>Shattered Dreams of Revolution</i> is an indispensable reference work for historians of the late Ottoman Empire. The precise, accessible language makes it suitable for adoption in undergraduate curricula.-- "İpek Kocaömer Yosmaoğlu, <i>American Historical Review</i>"<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Bedross Der Matossian is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

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