Sunday, March 16, 2008

Lecture: Islamist Imaginations of Turkey Ottoman's Past by Prof. Kemal Silay


Virginia Tech Presents

A Free Public Lecture

by

Professor Kemal Silay
Professor of Central Eurasian Studies,
Ottoman and Modern Turkish Studies Chair Professor,
Director of the Turkish Studies Program at
Indiana University, Bloomington
http://php.indiana.edu/~ksilay/


ISLAMIST IMAGINATIONS OF TURKEY’S OTTOMAN PAST:
COUNTER-REVOLUTION THROUGH
CULTURE AND POLITICS

Thursday, April 10, 2008 at 5:00–7:00 pm
655 McBryde Hall


Sponsored by the Sociological Association at VT (SAV) with the support of the Department of Sociology; the Turkish Student Association at Virginia Tech; the Religious Studies Program; the Department of Science and Technology in Society; the Alliance for Social, Political, Ethical, and Cultural Thought (ASPECT); IDST; the International Studies Program; the Middle East Working Group, the Department of Political Science, the Institute of Turkish Studies at Georgetown University, and the Africana Studies Program

For more information:
Tugrul Keskin, tugrulk@vt.edu
Gary Wood, garywood@vt.edu

Kemal Silay is a leading scholar of Turkish Studies. Among his numerous publications are Nedim and the Poetics of the Ottoman Court: Medieval Inheritance and the Need for Change (Indiana, 1994); An Anthology of Turkish Literature (Indiana, 1996); Ahmedi’s History of the Kings of the Ottoman Lineage and Their Holy Raids against the Infidels (Harvard, 2004); On the Book of Handsome Ones: Same-Sex Discourse in Ottoman Court Literature (forthcoming); and Anatomy of a Folk Manuscript: The Hagiography of Abu al-Wafa (forthcoming).

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