Frontier Orientalism and the Turkish Image in Central European Literature
- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2020
Summary
This comparative study analyzes the ways that Central European writers used stereotypes of the Turks to develop their national identities from the early modern period to the present. Charles D. Sabatos uses Andre Gingrich’s concept of “frontier Orientalism” to foreground his analysis of Central European Orientalism, designating the nations of the former Habsburg Empire as the occident and the Turks as the oriental “Other.” This study applies theoretical approaches to literary history—as developed by scholars such as Stephen Greenblatt and Linda Hutcheon—to a range of texts from the early modern period, the nineteenth-century national revivals, interwar independence, and the communist and postsocialist regimes. By following these depictions across literatures and over an extensive historical period, this study illustrates how the Turkish stereotype evolved from a menace to a more abstract yet still powerful metaphor of resistance, and finally to a mythical figure that evoked humor as often as fear.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2020
- ISBN-Print
- 978-1-7936-1487-2
- ISBN-Online
- 978-1-7936-1488-9
- Publisher
- Lexington, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 184
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Contents No access
- Acknowledgments No access
- Introduction No access
- Chapter 1 Menacing Turks No access Pages 1 - 24
- Chapter 2 Mythical Turks No access Pages 25 - 58
- Chapter 3 Metaphorical Turks No access Pages 59 - 96
- Chapter 4 Modernist Turks No access Pages 97 - 128
- Chapter 5 Metafictional Turks No access Pages 129 - 162
- Conclusion No access Pages 163 - 166
- Works Cited No access Pages 167 - 178
- Index No access Pages 179 - 182
- About the Author No access Pages 183 - 184





