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This book began life as a PhD dissertation at New York University. My first debt is to my advisers, Khaled Fahmy and Leslie Peirce, for their encouragement and support over many years. Khaled introduced me to the archives in Cairo, he taught me how to read court records at several levels, and he helped me to see the contemporary intellectual and political relevance of scholarship on Ottoman law. Leslie helped me to step back from Egypt and think about the wider Ottoman connections of my research, and she also taught me how to write, pushing me to tease out the overarching point from a tangle of observations and giving me the confidence to foreground and strengthen my own claims.
I would also like to thank all of the members of NYU’s departments of Middle Eastern & Islamic Studies and History for the wonderful enriching graduate education they gave me. In particular, I am grateful to Zachary Lockman for the support and advice he has given me during and after my time at NYU, Michael Gilsenan for his encouragement and regular hospitality, Sibel Erol for teaching me Turkish in the best language classes I have attended anywhere, Everett Rowson and Bernard Haykel for helping me read fiqh, Hasan Karataş for teaching me to decipher Ottoman documents, and Lauren Benton for reading my dissertation and giving me feedback from a world historian’s perspective. NYU also had a very supportive graduate community, and I thank all of my friends and colleagues who provided encouragement, conversation and criticism: On Barak, Robin Shulman, Kathi Ivanyi, Lale Can, Noah Haiduc-Dale, Sarah Tunney, Peter Valenti, Irfana Hashmi, Jeannie Miller, Omar Cheta, Guy Burak, BaŞak Tuğ, Ayelet Zoran-Rosen and Aaron Jakes.
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