
Contents
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The Political Order as a Sociological Category of Empire The Political Order as a Sociological Category of Empire
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Sources of Authority in Imperial Political Orders Sources of Authority in Imperial Political Orders
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Monarchs as Constituent Fictions Monarchs as Constituent Fictions
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The Imperial Production of the Local Dynastic Realm The Imperial Production of the Local Dynastic Realm
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From Imperial to Local Time: The Example of Late Ottoman Syria From Imperial to Local Time: The Example of Late Ottoman Syria
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Two The Imperial Origin of Successor Political Orders
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Published:August 2023
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Abstract
This chapter explores the modern imperial political order as a category of analysis and then engages with its two important elements: the dynastic realm and plural temporalities, including religious ones. It brings the example of late Ottoman Syria as an illustration of how temporal practices change in the moment of enforced imperial transformation. Only an empire-based theory of political order accounts for the continuity of plural sources of authority in successor societies in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Instead of nation-states, successor societies come into being in local states and new imperial projects after large transformations. These new orders typically repurpose institutions and practices from the previous imperial order, including monarchy and plural temporalities. Instead of capitalism and technology leading to nationalist or egalitarian revolutionary eradication, these forces rather rearrange the imperial order in local configurations. In the nineteenth century, empires adapted to the challenges of nationalism and remained the fundamental way in which the masses made sense of the world. The dynastic realm, the co-existence of imperial and local languages, and religious apprehensions of time thus continued to characterize political orders well into the twentieth century.
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