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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents ix
- Foreword Istanbul: A Space of Untranslatability, a City Always Arising from Its Ashes Like a Phoenix xi
- Historical Timeline xv
- Introduction Between Neo-Ottomanism and Neoliberalism: The Politics of Imagining Istanbul 1
-
PART I. The Past of Istanbul’s Present
- 1. Imperial, National, and Global Istanbul: Three Istanbul “Moments” from the Nineteenth to Twenty-First Centuries 25
- 2. Promiscuous Places: Cosmopolitan Milieus between Empire and Nation 38
- 3. The Past Is a Different City: Istanbul, Memoirs, and Multiculturalism 53
- 4. Cosmopolitanism, Violence, and the State in Istanbul and Odessa 66
-
PART II. Paradise Lost: Contested Memories of Cosmopolis
- 5. Cosmopolitanist Nostalgia: Geographies, Histories, and Memories of the Rum Polites 81
- 6. Cosmopolitanism as Situated Knowledge: Reading Istanbul with David Harvey 97
- 7. Hagia Sophia’s Tears and Smiles: The Ambivalent Life of a Global Monument 112
-
PART III. Actually Existing Conviviality: Sharing Space in a Globalizing City
- 8. Living Together in Ambivalence in a Migrant Neighborhood of Istanbul 131
- 9. Contesting the “Third Bridge” in Istanbul: Local Environmentalism, Cosmopolitan Attachments? 145
- 10. Performing Pride in a Summer of Dissent: Istanbul’s LGBT Parades 160
- Acknowledgments 177
- Recommended Further Reading 179
- Web Resources 181
- Notes on Contributors 183
- Index 187
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents ix
- Foreword Istanbul: A Space of Untranslatability, a City Always Arising from Its Ashes Like a Phoenix xi
- Historical Timeline xv
- Introduction Between Neo-Ottomanism and Neoliberalism: The Politics of Imagining Istanbul 1
-
PART I. The Past of Istanbul’s Present
- 1. Imperial, National, and Global Istanbul: Three Istanbul “Moments” from the Nineteenth to Twenty-First Centuries 25
- 2. Promiscuous Places: Cosmopolitan Milieus between Empire and Nation 38
- 3. The Past Is a Different City: Istanbul, Memoirs, and Multiculturalism 53
- 4. Cosmopolitanism, Violence, and the State in Istanbul and Odessa 66
-
PART II. Paradise Lost: Contested Memories of Cosmopolis
- 5. Cosmopolitanist Nostalgia: Geographies, Histories, and Memories of the Rum Polites 81
- 6. Cosmopolitanism as Situated Knowledge: Reading Istanbul with David Harvey 97
- 7. Hagia Sophia’s Tears and Smiles: The Ambivalent Life of a Global Monument 112
-
PART III. Actually Existing Conviviality: Sharing Space in a Globalizing City
- 8. Living Together in Ambivalence in a Migrant Neighborhood of Istanbul 131
- 9. Contesting the “Third Bridge” in Istanbul: Local Environmentalism, Cosmopolitan Attachments? 145
- 10. Performing Pride in a Summer of Dissent: Istanbul’s LGBT Parades 160
- Acknowledgments 177
- Recommended Further Reading 179
- Web Resources 181
- Notes on Contributors 183
- Index 187