Takvim-i Vekayi

The Calendar of the Ottoman and Turkish Studies Virtual Events Communication Platform

If you are interested in submitting your events to be posted on this platform’s calendar, the Takvim-i Vekayi, please fill out this form and e-mail it to osta.webmaster@gmail.com and otsa.webeditor@gmail.com copying secretariattsa@gmail.com at least ten days before your event. The form will be processed within a week of receipt. We are grateful to our volunteer webmaster, Gharam Alsaedi, a UC Davis Computer Science senior, and our volunteer web editor Molly Powers, a UC Davis junior double majoring in International Relations and History, for their work on the Takvim-i Vekayi and to Professor Carole Woodall for her initiative in creating this calendar.

[Center for Middle East Studies – University of California, Santa Barbra] Spiritual Subjects: Central Asian Pilgrims and the Ottoman Hajj at the End of Empire

At the turn of the twentieth century, thousands of Central Asians made the annual pilgrimage to Mecca. Traveling long distances, many lived for extended periods in Ottoman cities dotting the routes, effectively blurring the lines between pilgrims and migrants, and the legal boundary between Ottomans and foreigners. As the Ottoman Empire sought to promote a […]

[NYU Kevorkian Center] Silsila: Yusuf al-Nabhani and Conservative Modernity in the Late Ottoman Period

YUSUF AL-NABHANI AND CONSERVATIVE MODERNITY IN THE LATE OTTOMAN PERIOD Speakers: Amal Ghazal (Doha Institute for Graduate Studies), Ahmad El Shamsy (University of Chicago), Stephennie Mulder (UT Austin), Finbarr Barry Flood (NYU) Abstract: In recent years the impact that Sunni reform movements had on the nineteenth-century Islamic world has attracted increasing attention. On the one […]

[OTS-NYU] Mid-Atlantic Ottomanist Workshop, Panel 1: Space, Place, and Global Ottoman Institutions

Speakers: Emin Lelić (Salisbury University), Naz Yücel (George Washington University), Leyla Amzi-Erdoğdular (Rutgers University, Newark), and discussant Burçak Özlüdil (NJIT) Abstract: This panel will explore key social and political spaces and institutions present throughout the Ottoman Empire. Panelist Emin Lelić (Associate Professor of History at Salisbury University) will center his presentation around the Ottoman household […]

[Duke Middle East Studies Center] Book Talk: Queer in Translation: Sexual Politics Under Neoliberal Islam with Evren Savcı

Queer in Translation intervenes in queer studies’ separate, and in fact diagonally opposing approaches to neoliberalism and Islam by using the case of Turkey’s AKP governments for the past 16 years. I theorize “neoliberal Islam” as a unique regime that brings together economic and religious moralities that work to deploy marginality onto ever expanding populations […]

[NYU Kevorkian Center] Global Uprising: Space & Time II: The Square and the Commune

Global Uprising: Space & Time II: The Square and the Commune Speakers: Joshua Clover (UC Davis), Dean Saranillio (NYU), Nazan Üstündağ (Independent Scholar) and discussant Lenora Hanson (NYU) Abstract: Our age of uprising has also been the age of the urban insurrection. And yet for all their sublime spectacularity, the insurrections seem to reach their […]

[George And Irina Schaeffer Center] “Use Consoling Words For Our Butchered Nation”: Armenian Feminists’ Post-Genocide Expectations From their Turkish Counterparts

A LECTURE BY PROF. LERNA EKMEKCIOGLU The immediate aftermath of the genocide was a time of both misery and hope for Armenians. Emboldened by the Ottoman defeat, Allies’ occupation of the Ottoman capital and their wartime promises for justice, Armenian feminists of Constantinople did not shy away from asking Turkish women to acknowledge the damage […]

[NYU Kevorkian Center] Center for the Study of Gender and Sexuality Event

QUEER DIASPORIC VISUAL ART: ISLAMICATE CONTEXTS Speakers: Alireza Shojaian, Laurence Rasti, Sarp Kerem Yavuz Abstract: This panel explores questions of queerness and diaspora through the lens of visual art. CSGS Visiting Scholar Dr. Andrew Gayed will be in conversation with acclaimed contemporary artists Alireza Shojaian, Laurence Rasti, and Sarp Karem Yavuz. Turkish artist Sarp Karem Yavuz […]

[Keyman Modern Turkish Studies Program] – Spring Quarter Article workshop Call for Applications – March 12 th Deadline

The Keyman Modern Turkish Studies Program at Northwestern University’s Buffett Institute of Global Affairs continues its year-long series of virtual workshops to support early career scholars preparing an article for publication by a peer-reviewed journal. The spring sessions will begin in April 2021. To be considered for the first round submit your application, including a […]

[Northwestern Univ. Keyman Modern Turkish Studies Program] Visiting Speaker Dr. Baki Tezcan – The emasculated guardians of power: Black eunuchs and the interplay between gender and race at the Ottoman imperial court

In the light of four books that were either written with a view to secure the patronage of the Chief Black Eunuch of the Ottoman court, or to critique him, between the early seventeenth and mid-eighteenth centuries, Dr. Tezcan will discuss Ottoman literary representations of Africans and how these representations intersect with the heavily gendered […]

[University of Michigan Global Islamic Studies Center] IISS Lecture. The “Talisman of the World”: Mawlāna Jalāl al-Dīn Rūmī and the Mongols in 13th-Century Seljuk Anatolia by Sara Nur Yildiz (Berlin)

Mawlānā Jalāl al-Dīn Rūmī (d. 1274), the Sufi shaykh and poet celebrated for his mystical Mathnawi, rose to prominence during a particularly turbulent period as Mongol rule was imposed upon Seljuk Anatolia. While partisan arguments abound in modern Turkish historiography whether he was a collaborator with the Mongol invaders or not, Mawlana’s social and political […]

[OTSA] Habits of the Market: Commercial Networks, Regional Finance, and Resistance in the Ottoman Tobacco Trade (c. 1858-1912) with Kaleb Herman Adney and Eyal Ginio

Our W’OTSAp (What is up in Ottoman and Turkish Studies?) meeting in March features the winner of the 2020 Vangelis Kechriotis Memorial Travel Grant, Kaleb Herman Adney (UCLA). Herman’s dissertation project, Habits of the Market: Commercial Networks, Regional Finance, and Resistance in the Ottoman Tobacco Trade (c. 1858-1912), examines the political economy of tobacco in […]