The Emergence of Public Opinion
豆瓣
State and Society in the Late Ottoman Empire
Murat R. Şiviloğlu
简介
Nineteenth-century Ottoman politics was filled with casual references to public opinion. Having been popularised as a term in the 1860s, the following decades witnessed a deluge of issues being brought into 'the tribune of public opinion'. Murat R. Şiviloğlu explains how this concept emerged, and how such an abstract phenomenon embedded itself so deeply into the political discourse that even sultans had to consider its power. Through looking at the bureaucratic and educational institutions of the time, this book offers an analysis of the society and culture of the Ottomans, as well as providing an interesting application of theoretical ideas concerning common political identity and public opinion. The result is a more balanced and nuanced understanding of public opinion as a whole.
contents
Historical Background 23
A Bureaucratic Public Sphere 72
The World of İsmail Ferruh Efendi 110
The Schooling of the Public 134
The Emergence of a Reading Public after c 1860 174
The Turkish Revolution 222
Conclusion 250
Index 313
Copyright