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The Make and Break of Late Ottoman and Russian Empires

Class at Faculty of Social Sciences |
JMMZ189

Syllabus

1.      Introduction to the Course

2.      A Question of Definition and Comparison

3.      Politics of War and Peace: European Law of Nations versus Geopolitics in the Treaty of Paris 1856 and Berlin 1878

4.      Moral Economy versus Political Economy: The Russian Empire

5.      Moral Economy versus Political Economy: The Ottoman Empire

6.      Constitutionalism as External Deflection?

7.      Nationalist Empires

8.      Imperial Pan-Slavism

9.      The Rise of Pan-Islamism and Pan-Turkism

10.  Constitutional Empires on the Edge

11.  The Rise of Social Question in Russia

12.  Last Encounters

Annotation

COURSE DESCRIPTION

Why would these two multiethnic and multi-confessional land empires not survive the dawn of the twentieth century? Reluctantly yet repeatedly both Russian and Ottoman empires – each other’s most unrelenting foes – similarly embarked on reform during the nineteenth century. In the European inter-state realm, this entailed opting for military alliances as opposed to international isolation, and even as in the case of Russia reforming that inter-state order. Meanwhile, in the domestic realm it meant the exaltation for reform projects such as permanent laws and new institutions, political economy and political representation. The course will provide a reading to these contested concepts as the nationalistic and social revolutionary fever engulfs the respective imperial societies in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century.