Texts
Fisher, Alan, The Crimean Tatars (Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press, 1978).
Finkel, Caroline, Osman’s Dream: The History of the Ottoman Empire (NY: Basic Books, 2006).
Gammer, Moshe, The Lone Wolf and the Bear: Three Centuries of Chechen Defiance of Russian Rule (London: Hurst and Co., 2005).
Malcolm, Noel, Bosnia: A Short History (New York: NYU Press, 1996).
Wilson, Andrew, “Politics in and Around Crimea: A Difficult Homecoming,” in Allworth, Edward, ed., The Tatars of Crimea: Return to the Homeland, (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1998).
Course Description
This is an introductory course to the history of the various Muslim nationalities living in Eastern Europe. In particular it will cover the Bosnian Muslims, the Crimean Tatars and the Chechens. These nationalities all adopted Islam under Ottoman influence and later came under the rule of Christian empires. The course will thus start with a survey of the long history of the Ottoman Empire. It will then examine the history of each of the nationalities chronologically from their ethno-genesis through to modern times. Particular emphasis will be given to the 19th and 20th centuries when these peoples all lived under first Christian and then communist rule. During this time these nationalities became reduced to national and religious minorities within much larger states dominated by Slavs of Christian heritage. These states saw integrating these Muslim nationalities as a problem and pursued various policies ranging from granting them broad cultural administrative autonomy to conducting ruthless repression and ethnic cleansing against them. This class will examine the relationship between these nationalities and their rulers in Belgrade and Moscow in the historical context of the slow disintegration of the Ottoman Empire and the subjugation of much of its Muslim population to European colonial rule.
Course Requirements
This course will consist of lectures and discussions based upon the assigned reading. At the end of each week every student will be required to submit a 200 to 300 word long summary of the week’s readings. This summary should include the main points and themes addressed by the author. These summaries will count significantly towards the final grade for the class. Each student will also be required to write a 2000 to 2500 word long research paper on one of the Muslim nationalities in the Balkans, Caucasus or Crimea. This assignment is due the first day of the last week of classes. Plagiarism will result in failing the course and notification of the Dean.
Grading
Twelve Short Summaries 36% (3% each)
Final Research Paper 50%
Oral Participation 14%
Schedule
Week 1 Introduction and Course Organization
Section One: The Ottoman Empire
Week 2 The Foundation of the Ottoman Empire
Chapters 1-5 in Finkel, pp. 1-151
Week 3 Expansion and Consolidation of the Empire
Chapters 6-9 in Finkel, pp. 152-288
Week 4 “The Sick Man of Europe”
Chapters 10-16 in Finkel, pp. 289-554
Section Two: The Balkans with Special Emphasis on Bosnia
Week 5 Bosnia in the Middle Ages and under the Ottomans
Chapters 1-9 in Malcolm, pp. 1-135
Week 6 Austrian Rule, WWI and WWII
Chapters 10-13 in Malcolm, pp. 136-192
Week 7 Communist and Post-Communist Rule
Chapters 14-16 and Epilogue in Malcolm, pp. 193-272
Section Three: Crimea
Week 8 The Crimean Khanate and the Tsarist Era
Chapters 1-10 in Fisher, pp. 1-108
Week 9 The Crimean Tatars in the Soviet Union
Chapters 11-25 in Fisher, pp. 109-202
Week 10 Return to Crimea
Wilson
Section Four: The Caucasus with Special Emphasis on Chechnya
Week 11 Tsarist Subjugation
Chapters 1-9 in Gammer, pp. 1-118
Week 12 Soviet Rule and After
Chapters 10-15 in Gammer, pp. 119-221
Week 13 Conclusion
Research paper due in first class of the week.
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1 comment:
i would've loved to take this one.
best of luck,
veronica
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