Yiğit Akın’s research while affiliated with Tulane University and other places

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Publications (1)


War, Women, and the State: The Politics of Sacrifice in the Ottoman Empire During the First World War
  • Article

September 2014

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252 Reads

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16 Citations

Journal of Women s History

Yiğit Akın

The Ottoman Empire was one of the belligerents most severely affected by the First World War. The war lasted four years and required the most comprehensive mobilization of men and resources in the history of the empire. The extraction of millions of men from society and the economy, coupled with the state’s increasingly ruthless intervention in the everyday lives of the Ottoman people, placed unprecedented burdens on their shoulders. Women bore most of the brunt of the war and the state’s wartime policies on the home front. Focusing on their perceptions of and reactions to the war and the dramatic changes it brought to Ottoman society, this article examines how the war shaped women’s relationships with the state and influenced their understanding of gender roles. In doing so, it aims to challenge the historical and cultural construction of war as exclusively male centered and render Ottoman women’s wartime actions and experiences visible.

Citations (1)


... Modernization steps did not affect the Muslim legal code advocating sex segregation and unequal legal treatment; however, it brought about modest reforms including the introduction of women's rights in inheritance, abolishment of female slavery, opening of secondary schools for girls and girls' vocational schools, women access to the university (Anadolu-Okur, 2005: 18). During the second constitutional period (1908)(1909)(1910)(1911)(1912)(1913)(1914)(1915)(1916)(1917)(1918)(1919), the movement was politicized and debates regarding women's rights became vigorous since women's organizations constituted an important role in the national liberation front in the Balkan Wars and First World War (Akın, 2014). Accordingly, women were admitted to universities in 1914, to the workforce in factories, and to public service in 1915 (Tekeli, 2010). ...

Reference:

"Let the man know his place!": Challenging the Patriarchy Embedded in Social Language via Twitter (X)
War, Women, and the State: The Politics of Sacrifice in the Ottoman Empire During the First World War
  • Citing Article
  • September 2014

Journal of Women s History