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10. Not Quite Syrians: Aleppo’s Communities of Collaboration
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface and Acknowledgements ix
- Note on Translation and Transliteration xiii
- Abbreviations and Acronyms xv
- 1. Introduction: Modernity, Class, and the Architectures of Community 1
- 2. An Eastern Mediterranean City on the Eve of Revolution 31
-
Section I. Being Modern in a Time of Revolution: The Revolution of 1908 and the Beginnings of Middle-Class Politics (1908–1918)
- Introduction 55
- 3. Ottoman Precedents (I): Journalism, Voluntary Association, and the “True Civilization” of the Middle Class 68
- 4. Ottoman Precedents (II): The Technologies of the Public Sphere and the Multiple Deaths of the Ottoman Citizen 95
-
Section II. Being Modern in a Moment of Anxiety: The Middle Class Makes Sense of A “Postwar” World (1918–1924)—Historicism, Nationalism, and Violence
- Introduction 121
- 5. Rescuing the Arab from History: Halab, Orientalist Imaginings, Wilsonianism, and Early Arabism 134
- 6. The Persistence of Empire at the Moment of Its Collapse: Ottoman-Islamic Identity and “New Men” Rebels 160
- 7. Remembering the Great War: Allegory, Civil Virtue, and Conservative Reaction 185
-
Section III. Being Modern in an Era of Colonialism: Middle-Class Modernity and the Culture of the French Mandate for Syria (1924–1946)
- Introduction 211
- 8. Deferring to the A‘yan: The Middle-Class and the Politics of Notables 222
- 9. Middle-Class Fascism and the Transformation of Civil Violence: Steel Shirts, White Badges, and the Last Qabaday 255
- 10. Not Quite Syrians: Aleppo’s Communities of Collaboration 279
- 11. Coda: The Incomplete Project of Middle-Class Modernity and the Paradox of Metropolitan Desire 299
- Select Bibliography 309
- Index 317
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface and Acknowledgements ix
- Note on Translation and Transliteration xiii
- Abbreviations and Acronyms xv
- 1. Introduction: Modernity, Class, and the Architectures of Community 1
- 2. An Eastern Mediterranean City on the Eve of Revolution 31
-
Section I. Being Modern in a Time of Revolution: The Revolution of 1908 and the Beginnings of Middle-Class Politics (1908–1918)
- Introduction 55
- 3. Ottoman Precedents (I): Journalism, Voluntary Association, and the “True Civilization” of the Middle Class 68
- 4. Ottoman Precedents (II): The Technologies of the Public Sphere and the Multiple Deaths of the Ottoman Citizen 95
-
Section II. Being Modern in a Moment of Anxiety: The Middle Class Makes Sense of A “Postwar” World (1918–1924)—Historicism, Nationalism, and Violence
- Introduction 121
- 5. Rescuing the Arab from History: Halab, Orientalist Imaginings, Wilsonianism, and Early Arabism 134
- 6. The Persistence of Empire at the Moment of Its Collapse: Ottoman-Islamic Identity and “New Men” Rebels 160
- 7. Remembering the Great War: Allegory, Civil Virtue, and Conservative Reaction 185
-
Section III. Being Modern in an Era of Colonialism: Middle-Class Modernity and the Culture of the French Mandate for Syria (1924–1946)
- Introduction 211
- 8. Deferring to the A‘yan: The Middle-Class and the Politics of Notables 222
- 9. Middle-Class Fascism and the Transformation of Civil Violence: Steel Shirts, White Badges, and the Last Qabaday 255
- 10. Not Quite Syrians: Aleppo’s Communities of Collaboration 279
- 11. Coda: The Incomplete Project of Middle-Class Modernity and the Paradox of Metropolitan Desire 299
- Select Bibliography 309
- Index 317