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Inventing Laziness

Author(s): Melis Hafez

ISBN: 9781108448215
Publication Date: 4/7/2024
Pages: 318
Format: Paperback
Regular price £29.99 GBP
Regular price Sale price £29.99 GBP

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Neither laziness nor its condemnation are new inventions, however, perceiving laziness as a social condition that afflicts a 'nation' is. In the early modern era, Ottoman political treatises did not regard the people as the source of the state's problems. Yet in the nineteenth century, as the imperial ideology of Ottomanism and modern discourses of citizenship spread, so did the understanding of laziness as a social disease that the 'Ottoman nation' needed to eradicate. Asking what we can learn about Ottoman history over the long nineteenth-century by looking closely into the contested and shifting boundaries of the laziness - productivity binary, Melis Hafez explores how 'laziness' can be used to understand emerging civic culture and its exclusionary practices in the Ottoman Empire. A polyphonic involvement of moralists, intellectuals, polemicists, novelists, bureaucrats, and, to an extent, the public reveals the complexities and ambiguities of this multifaceted cultural transformation. Using a wide variety of sources, this book explores the sustained anxiety about productivity that generated numerous reforms as well as new understandings of morality, subjectivity, citizenship, and nationhood among the Ottomans.

  • Traces the development of the binary between work and laziness during the last century of the Ottoman Empire
  • A lively and original approach to understanding emerging civic culture and its exclusionary practices in the Ottoman Empire
  • Looks at a variety of issues in late Ottoman state and society, such as morality, subjectivity, citizenship, and nationhood