During the nineteenth century, Ottoman sultans and bureaucrats engaged in a series of reforms that dramatically transformed the Ottoman state and society. But what did these reforms mean for the working classes in the Empire? In this study, Akn Sefer focuses on a single naval worksite, The Imperial Arsenal on the Golden Horn in Istanbul, to explore how reform processes were entangled with global capitalism. The Arsenal was a nexus where the global transformations of capitalism and Ottoman reform policies converged with the traditional and modern processes of labor coercion and migration. Drawing on an in-depth exploration of archival sources, Sefer traces the complicated relations between the working classes and the Ottoman state within this worksite and the neighbourhoods around it in Istanbul. Engaging with a wide array of scholarship in Ottoman and global history, this study brings new perspectives and questions on Ottoman modernity, highlighting the agency of working classes in both Ottoman and global history.
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Offers a working-class perspective on Ottoman modernity, focusing on a naval worksite to connect reform processes with global capitalism.
Introduction; Part I. A New Order:
1. Accumulating capital;
2. Binding
workers; Part II. Modernizing Coercion:
3. Militarizing labor;
4. Mobilizing
children;
5. The factory regime; Part III. The Class on the Move:
6. A
working-class colony;
7. A working-class quarter; Epilogue: reform, or the
order of capital; Bibliography; Index.
Akn Sefer is an Assistant Professor in the Core Program at Kadir Has University. Sefer's research focuses on late Ottoman history, labor, migration, and industrialization. He has contributed to articles in journals including the International Review of Social History, International Labor and Working-Class History, and the International Journal of Middle East Studies.