Spectacle, Entertainment, and Recreation in Late Ottoman and Early Turkish Republican Cities
255 pages
English

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255 pages
English

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Description

The short lived Tulip Era breathed a new life into Ottoman social life and novel elements of art, architecture and new spaces of leisure and entertainment that both men and women could participate and enjoy emerged during the early 18th century. Later, during the 19th century, triggered by the state policies to establish closer relationship with European states, as well as by the royal urge to be seen and felt by their subjects more intensively and more interactively, these novelties in social life were predominantly adopted and instrumentalized by the ruling elite and found their reflection in major urban centers of the empire. With the emulation of the ruling elite by various classes and due to an increasing social mobility among classes, the new forms of entertainment and recreation gradually permeated into the rest of the society and ended up having a long-term impact on the Ottoman society.



Hence, during the 19th century, a modern urban life in Ottoman cities has emerged, shaped by these new forms of recreation and entertainment and by new regimes of visibility. Ripping open of their traditional nuclei in the second half of the 19th century, these urban centers accommodated –along with new trade, financial, industrial and residential facilities– different types of entertainment and recreation, ranging from opera to cinema and from concerts to sports. Thus the late-Ottoman cities witnessed the emergence of new architectural and urban facilities, such as theatres, opera houses, clubs, performance halls, sports fields, and public parks. These spaces of entertainment and spectacle represented the modernizing face of the empire and also embraced by the Republican elite after the foundation of the young Turkish Republic. These public/social spaces were utilized for the making of the modern Turkish nation.



This edited volume offers an analysis of the forms and spaces of spectacle, entertainment, and recreation during the late Ottoman and early Republican eras. Each article focuses on different forms on spectacle, entertainment or recreation in varied cities of Ottoman Empire or Republican Turkey. The edited volume aims not only to shed light on how such urban or architectural spaces were developed and shaped, but also to scrutinize their impact on social, cultural, urban life in the modernizing Ottoman Empire and Republican Turkey.


Part of the Critical Studies in Architecture of the Middle East series.


List of Figures

Acknowledgements

Foreword – Nazan Maksudyan

Introduction – Seda Kula


 


Part 1. New Understandings of Landscapes and Spaces of Recreation



Chapter 1: The Making of Gülhane Park: From Royal Gardens to Public Spaces in Late Ottoman Istanbul – Nilay Karaca

Chapter 2: ‘So, I’ve Become the Chief Birdman!’: Visions of a Public Zoological Garden in Istanbul and Ebüzziya’s Field Trip – Semra Horuz

Chapter 3: The Aesthetic of Prosperity: A Study of the Landscape Paintings of the Military Painter Halil Paşa (1857–1939) – Ekin Akalın

Chapter 4: Becoming In-between: The Experience of Modernity in Kuşdili – Bora Yasin Özkuş



Urban Reflections

I.
The Transformation of Recreation Areas in the City of Adana: From Formal Parks to Casual Spaces – F. Duygu Saban

II. The People’s Garden of Mersin: From Entertainment to Ceremonial Space – Tülin Selvi Ünlü


 


Part 2. Entertainment, Diversity, and Diversion



Chapter 5: Direklerarası as the Stage of Entertainment and Sociability in Late Ottoman Istanbul – Fatma Tunç Yaşar

Chapter 6: A Leisurely Stroll in Allied-Occupied Istanbul: Urban Encounters between Muslims, Non-Muslims, and Occupation Forces (1918–1923) – Ceren Abi

Chapter 7: The City, the Sea, and the Subaltern: The Urban Subcultures of 167 Galata and Piraeus, 1880–1930 – Erik Blackthorne-O’Barr



Urban Reflections

III. Spatial and Cultural Dimensions of Entertainment in a Modernizing Ottoman City: The Hotels of Nineteenth-Century Bursa – Figen Kıvılcım Çorakbaş

IV. Class, Resilience, and Entertainment in Beirut (1915–2021): A Short Commentary – Ümit Fırat Açıkgöz


 


Part 3. Spectacle Venues in the Cityscape



Chapter 8: Leading Panorama-Diorama Initiatives in the Ottoman Empire – Fatma Ürekli

Chapter 9: The Transformation of Entertainment Activities and Theatres in Late Ottoman Izmir – Cenk Berkant

Chapter 10: The Role of the Bourgeoisie in the Cultural Transformation of the City: The Case of Süreyya Paşa in Istanbul – Neslişah Leman Başaran Lotz

Chapter 11: Film Spectacles and Cinema Halls in Late Ottoman Cities – Seda Kula



Urban Reflections

V. Leisure, Entertainment, and Spectacle in Late Ottoman Salonica – Sotirios Dimitriadis

VI. Spectacle in Trabzon During the Late Ottoman and Early Republican Period: Kostaki Theatre and Pilosyan Cinema – Ömer İskender Tuluk


 


Epilogue: Built, Unbuilt, and Demolished: A Requiem for Leisure – Nilay Karaca

Notes on Contributors

Index

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 27 octobre 2023
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781789388329
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 4 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,7300€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

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