توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Mediterranean Diasporas: Politics and Ideas in the Long 19th Century
نام کتاب : Mediterranean Diasporas: Politics and Ideas in the Long 19th Century
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : دیاسپوراهای مدیترانه ای: سیاست و ایده ها در قرن نوزدهم طولانی
سری :
نویسندگان : Maurizio Isabella, Konstantina Zanou (editors)
ناشر : Bloomsbury Academic
سال نشر : 2016
تعداد صفحات : 241
ISBN (شابک) : 9781472576651 , 9781472576675
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 2 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Cover page\nHalftitle page\nTitle page\nCopyright page\nDedication\nCONTENTS\nACKNOWLEDGEMENTS\nLIST OF CONTRIBUTORS\nMap of the Mediterranean\nINTRODUCTION The Sea, its People and their Ideas in the Long Nineteenth Century\n The Mediterranean as a category of historical analysis\n From the Diaspora to the diasporas\n Revolutionary Mediterraneans\n The Mediterranean as an imaginary political and civilizational space\n An intellectual history in the Mediterranean and beyond?\n Notes\nLetters from Spain:The 1820 Revolution and the Liberal International\n Introduction\n The epistolary genre and its politics\n Euroamerican networks and the different faces of liberalism\n Conclusion\n Notes\nAn Itinerant Liberal: Almeida Garrett’s Exilic Itineraries and Political Ideas in the Age of Southern European Revolutions (1820–34)\n Notes\nLearning Lessons from the Iberian Peninsula: Italian Exiles and the Making of a Risorgimento Without People, 1820–48\n The Italian exiles of 1821 in the Iberian peninsula\n Italian liberal exiles of 1831 in the Iberian peninsula: searching for a new definition of the nation\n Conclusions\n Notes\nMediterranean Liberals? Italian Revolutionaries and the Making of a Colonial Sea, ca. 1800–30\n The British Empire and Mediterranean liberty: from Vittorio Barzoni’s liberal imperialism to Ugo Foscolo’s disappointment\n Opposing colonial rule in the name of universal rights for freedom\n Gianbattista Marochetti and European expansion eastward\n Conclusions\n Notes\nOttomans on the Move: Hassuna D’Ghies and the ‘New Ottomanism’ of the 1830s\n Mobilities and modernizations in the Ottoman Empire\n The New Ottomanism of the 1830s\n Hassuna D’Ghies’ liberal trajectory: Marseilles, Paris and London\n A constitutional trajectory: securities against misrule\n An anti-imperial trajectory: Tripoli and Algiers\n An Ottoman trajectory: from liberal empireto imperial liberalism\n Notes\nImperial Nationalism and Orthodox Enlightenment: A Diasporic Story Between the Ionian Islands, Russia and Greece, ca. 1800–30\n I. The setting\n II. The cast\n III. The plot\n Conclusions\n Notes\nAway or Homeward Bound? The Slippery Case of Mediterranean Place in the Era Before Nation-states\n Niccolò Tommaseo: many homes, rarely away\n Pacifico Valussi: few homes, unexpectedly away\n Matija Ban: away as home\n Conclusion: slipping through Mediterranean imperial, post-state and national geographies\n Notes\nThe Strange Lives of Ottoman Liberalism: Exile, Patriotism and Constitutionalism in the Thought of Mustafa Fazıl Paşa\n From Southern Italy to Istanbul: Trajectories of Albanian Nationalism in the Writings of Girolamo de Rada and Shemseddin Sami Frashëri, ca. 1848–1903\n Girolamo de Rada and the defence of a federal and multicultural Albanian nationalism in Italyand the Ottoman Empire (1814–1903)\n Shemseddin Sami Frashëri: the making and unmaking of an Ottoman, Turkish and Albanian intellectual\n Conclusions\n Notes\n Notes\nFrom Southern Italy to Istanbul: Trajectories of Albanian Nationalism in the Writings of Girolamo de Rada and Shemseddin Sami Frashëri, ca. 1848–1903\n Girolamo de Rada and the defence of a federal and multicultural Albanian nationalism in Italy and the Ottoman Empire (1814–1903)\n Shemseddin Sami Frashëri: the making and unmaking of an Ottoman, Turkish and Albanian intellectual\n Conclusions\n Notes\nOttomanism with a Greek Face: Karamanlı Greek Orthodox Diaspora at the End of the Ottoman Empire\n Fictions and narratives on the Cappadocean diaspora\n The multiple origins of migration: from the Aegean and Cappadocia to Smyrna\n The history professor: from Cappadocia to Smyrna, Athens and Istanbul\n The lawyer: a Greek ‘Young Turk’ between Cappadocia, Smyrna and Istanbul\n Concluding remarks: the collapse of the empire and its diasporic networks\n Notes\nAfterword: Writing Mediterranean Diasporas After the Transnational Turn\n Notes\nINDEX