
Contents
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The Age of Angst: Turkish Vernacularism and Political Expression The Age of Angst: Turkish Vernacularism and Political Expression
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The Age of Excitement: From Conquest to Exploration The Age of Excitement: From Conquest to Exploration
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The Age of Perfection: From Engagement to Exceptionalism The Age of Perfection: From Engagement to Exceptionalism
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Imperial Turkish and the Translation Movement Imperial Turkish and the Translation Movement
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Four Ways of Writing on Politics Four Ways of Writing on Politics
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Ethics Ethics
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Statecraft Statecraft
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Juristic Perspectives Juristic Perspectives
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Sufistic Visions Sufistic Visions
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Languages of Political Thought Languages of Political Thought
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One The Discourse on Rulership
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Published:November 2019
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Abstract
This chapter examines the Ottoman political discourse from its origins in the early fifteenth century to the third quarter of the sixteenth century. Views on the caliphate were expressed through a diversified corpus of works on government and rulership across various genres and disciplines accompanied by a broad-based interest in engaging with issues related to government among the Ottoman readership. This diverse body of political literature, written in different languages and genres, was produced by an equally diverse group of authors from various backgrounds, including statesmen, jurists, and Sufis. Along with the expansion of the public sphere in sixteenth-century social life, not only did ordinary folks come to be more interested in matters of government but new questions and sensibilities were introduced to the sphere of the political as well. The conventional form of political discourse that was largely confined to providing advice for rulership by a select few gave way to presenting views on all aspects of government by people from different walks of life.
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