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Women in the Ottoman Balkans: Gender, Culture and History

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by Amila Buturovic


  subjects—law, religion, economics, literature, public and private life, politics and

  nation-building—and draws upon multiple fields and disciplines. Recognizing the

  diversity of ethnic and religious groups in the Ottoman Balkans, contributors to

  the volume seek to address questions of acculturation across religious and ethnic

  boundaries as they inflected gender relations and the daily lives of women.

  To this end, individual contributions assess practices of which women were the

  principal subjects or objects, cementing existing values or negotiating change vis-

  à-vis their immediate surroundings and overarching institutions. This represents

  a move towards a broader understanding of women’s participation in all facets

  of social life, examining their modes of empowerment and disempowerment, of

  self-affirmation and self-denial, and investigating the fora through which they

  could—and did—allow their voices to be heard. Whatever their status, the women

  of the Ottoman Balkans played important roles in both stabilizing and changing

  the region’s historical landscape.

  While the scope of this volume is by no means exhaustive, the sources examined

  by its various contributors are inevitably multiple and diverse, coming not just

  from Ottoman administrative and court records, but also from local traditions

  (both written and oral), ecclesiastical archives, and national historiographies.

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  Women In the ottoman Balkans

  Contributors have approached the women under study from very diverse analytical

  perspectives, and yet there are distinct common threads that run through and link

  together even seemingly disparate contributions. For this reason, the editors have

  chosen not to attempt a generic grouping of the essays—under such headings, say,

  as “the law,” “literature,” “religion,” and so forth; instead, readers are encouraged

  to explore common links and trajectories based upon methodological, theoretical,

  thematic, and historical considerations.

  For example, where Olga Augustinos describes the fictional Christianization

  and westernization of a former Ottoman slave transposed to France in a novel

  by the Abbé Prévost, Angela Jianu emphasizes the historical role of upper-class

  Romanian women in the development of consumer practices that strengthened

  ties with western Europe and promoted a new, proto-national identity, while

  Patricia Fann Bouteneff stresses the function of folktales in underscoring not only

  gender difference but also Pontic identity in Balkanic exile. Where Mirna Šoliæ

  writes of the lyrical portrayal of interfaith romance in the works of the Croatian

  poet Luka Botiæ, and Ýrvin Cemil Schick of inter-ethnic sexual violence as a

  metaphor for national conflict, Sophia Laiou and Svetlana Ivanova highlight the

  lived reality of matrimonial relationships across ethnic and religious boundaries

  in Greek- and Bulgarian-speaking communities, respectively. Where Peter Mario

  Kreuter focuses on women’s practical duties as protectors of the community

  against demons and revenants, and Amila Buturoviæ on the role prescribed for

  them in Bosnian ballads as the ultimate resolvers of social conflicts arising from

  men’s class-transgressive behavior, Gila Hadar highlights the political activism

  and organized resistance of working-class Jewish women in Salonika. Where,

  finally, Kerima Filan describes women’s active role in upholding the Muslim

  community by establishing charitable foundations and endowing mosques and

  schools, Selma Zeèeviæ stresses their pragmatism and readiness to seek the most

  advantageous interpretation of Islamic law in dealing with the vexing problem of

  what to do about a long-missing husband.

  The criss-crossing and interlocking conversations that take place among

  the many interlocutors comprising this volume underscore the fallacy of the

  dichotomy of fact and discourse, and point to the urgent necessity of giving a

  more dialogical orientation to the study of Ottoman history. Certainly a material

  reality exists independently of human perception, but just as certainly that material

  reality is not comprehensible to the human beings that experience it outside of

  their cognitive categories, significational practices, and discursive networks.

  The men and women who worked in factories, went to court, and partook in all

  manners of social, economic, and political activities were not distinct from those

  who sang ballads and told tales about ill-fated romances across intercommunal

  boundaries, nor from those who turned to those same ballads and tales for comfort

  when transplanted to an alien land as a result of the tragic wars and population

  movements that brought so much misery to the region, particularly in the twilight

  of the age of empires. Of course no single scholar can be expected to address all

  these angles at once, but there is much to be gained from interdisciplinary meetings

  ButurovIæ and schIck, IntroductIon

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  of the minds in which the products of different approaches and methodologies are

  allowed to intermingle and to jointly create a whole that is greater than the sum of

  its parts. That is precisely the goal of this volume.

  ***

  Several papers examine how literary texts treat the dynamics of gender relations,

  encounters with otherness, and the expectations and responsibilities associated

  with such encounters. In “Eastern Concubines, Western Mistresses: Prévost’s

  Histoire d’une Grecque moderne,” Olga Augustinos looks at the life of Théophé,

  the heroine of Prévost’s novel, said to have been modeled on the real-life French-

  Circassian epistolary author Mlle Aïssé. From the author’s perspective, Théophé

  was subjected to two modes of othering: as a harem concubine, and as a Greek

  woman. She thus epitomized the continuous tension between the construction of

  the ideal “western” woman, as shaped by eighteenth-century French culture, and

  her “eastern” counterpart and antithesis. The process of Théophé’s “liberation”

  from the harem, and her subsequent exposure to westernization under the tutelage

  of a French diplomat who certainly had his own cultural and sexual agenda, only

  reinforced her otherness, raising fundamental questions about the markers and

  limits of alterity, and whether or not it can ever be transcended.

  Similar questions are raised by Mirna Šoliæ in “Women in Ottoman Bosnia as

  seen through the Eyes of Luka Botiæ, a Christian Poet.” Standing outside of the

  Ottoman geographical space though at its very threshold, and deeply invested in

  the Croatian movement of national awakening, Botiæ revived themes recorded

  in folk poetry about Muslim-Christian romantic encounters. He fashioned new

  forms of representation for the Ottoman ethos and for inter-religious relations,

  while simultaneously giving folk poetry a whole new role in the formation of

  Croatian national culture. Botiæ’s poetry thus posited women as participants in

  romantic escapades, but it also helped the reader understand better the politics of

  cultural differentiation in this zone of heightened contact between Catholic Croats

  and Muslim Bosnians, especially as rendered into the emerging national canon.

 
Two essays focus on folk material in an effort to uncover the role of women

  in either the transmission and safeguarding, or the negotiation and subversion,

  of societal norms. Amila Buturoviæ’s “Love and/or Death? Women and

  Conflict Resolution in the Traditional Bosnian Ballad” addresses the range of

  responsibilities shouldered by women for the preservation of the norms established

  by patriarchy. In the world of traditional Bosnian ballads, women regulated codes

  of behavior often to their own detriment. The representation of women was never

  singular; rather, recognizing their membership in and loyalty to class, generation,

  marital status, and other social categories, the ballad contrasted their romantic

  pragmaticism against their men’s passive sentimentality which threatened the

  stability of the social order.

  Gender-differentiation in the narration of folktales is the focus of Patricia Fann

  Bouteneff’s “Persecution and Perfidy: Women’s and Men’s Worldviews in Pontic

  Greek Folktales.” In stories collected after the mass resettlement of Pontic Greeks

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  Women In the ottoman Balkans

  following the tragic population exchange between Greece and Turkey, narrators

  nostalgically reflected on their homeland, community life, and the challenges posed

  by exile. Bouteneff highlights these tales’ poignant expression of a self-identity

  that defied the official, undifferentiated definition of Greekness; she shows that,

  given Pontic Greeks’ cultural isolation both before and after relocation, folktales

  remained an important medium for negotiating gender relations and registering

  differences between men’s and women’s life experiences.

  Folk culture is also the focus of Peter Mario Kreuter’s “The Role of Women

  in Southeast European Vampire Belief,” which focuses on popular stories and

  reported incidents relating to vampirism as recorded by Austro-Hungarian

  emissaries, particularly to Romania and Serbia. While later mainstream fiction

  has tended to focus on male vampires and their female victims, Kreuter’s sources

  reveal a wide range of roles ascribed to women in folk beliefs about the undead.

  Ultimately, however, it was their function in carrying out proper burial rituals and

  thus attending to the dead in ways that would safeguard the entire community

  against their eventual return that accorded women their centrality. In this respect,

  they were empowered, through ritual practices, to protect their village against

  alien impostors—vampires—in historical times of continuous political intrusion

  by aliens of a different kind, first Ottoman and then Austro-Hungarian.

  Indeed, a number of essays indicate that the empowerment of Balkan women

  during the Ottoman period was not limited solely to the sphere of private, everyday

  life. On the contrary, women also found important venues for self-affirmation

  through public institutions. Ottoman rule engendered new subjectivities that

  sometimes came in the form of subversion and resistance, and other times

  appropriation and participation. In “Women as Founders of Pious Endowments

  in Bosnia,” Kerima Filan examines the involvement of Bosnian women in the

  construction and administration of public space. Ottoman women could legally

  own property and freely dispose of it. While they could not personally participate

  in the actions of the political and religious elites, they did make full use of the rights

  and privileges accorded them by law to exert indirect but significant, influence on

  society, notably by designating their property as pious endowments—schools,

  hospitals, dervish lodges, houses of worship, etc.—and thus controlling their

  function and operation for decades to come.

  Another mode of self-affirmation came in the form of resistance to and

  subversion of local norms. Sophia Laiou’s “Christian Women in an Ottoman

  World: Interpersonal and Family Cases Brought Before the Shari‘a Courts” reveals

  Greek women’s ability and willingness to reach beyond their own communities’

  ecclesiastical and lay institutions when they deemed their interests better served

  by appearing before Muslim authorities. Court documents reveal that women often

  had considerable knowledge of their legal options across different legal-religious

  systems when confronted with specific personal and communal situations, and

  thus sheds light upon the breadth of the alternatives available to them.

  The personal empowerment conferred to women by their appearance before a

  judge to claim legal rights denied by family members and/or community norms

  ButurovIæ and schIck, IntroductIon

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  is also addressed by Svetlana Ivanova in “Judicial Treatment of the Matrimonial

  Problems of Christian Women in Rumeli during the Seventeenth and Eighteenth

  Centuries.” Through an examination of Islamic court records as well as Orthodox

  church documents in Bulgaria, Ivanova determines that Christian women

  displayed a certain awareness of their legal options as they sought to overcome

  adversity or vulnerability within their own communities, sometimes resorting to

  Ottoman authorities in the hope that they would be less influenced by the local

  balance of power, and therefore more objective and just.

  Women’s understanding of their legal rights and their readiness, when

  necessary, to claim those rights before a judge is also addressed by Selma Zeèeviæ

  in “Missing Husbands, Waiting Wives, Bosnian Mufti s: Fatwa Texts and the

  Interpretation of Gendered Presences and Absences in Late Ottoman Bosnia.”

  Focusing on husbands who either deserted their wives or failed to return to them

  for reasons beyond their control—and on their wives’ subsequent efforts to rebuild

  their lives and redefine their domestic functions and responsibilities—as reflected

  in the opinions of the Bosnian jurist Ahmed of Mostar, Zeèeviæ discusses the legal

  framework that governed such cases under various schools of law, particularly

  the dominant Hanafi school, and shows that both judges and petitioners could

  be flexible and creative in seeking a just resolution to the hardships faced by

  women.

  If some women pursued their rights in court, others took to the streets. Gila

  Hadar’s “Jewish Tobacco Workers in Salonika: Gender and Family in the Context

  of Social and Ethnic Strife” focuses on women’s transgression of traditional norms

  in favor not only of labor force participation, but indeed of active involvement

  within the workers’ movement. Set against a backdrop of developing capitalism,

  national awakening, and rising socialist militancy, Hadar shows that delineations

  of gender, class, and ethnicity crossed, merged, and even conflicted with one

  another as women broke out of the domestic sphere and into the public arena,

  taking part in the momentous events and social struggles of their time.

  The gradual process of de-Ottomanization, accompanied by daunting changes

  in the political fabric of the Balkans, occasioned new modes of cultural and social

  engagement for women. Angela Jianu’s “Women, Fashion, and Europeanization:

  The Romanian Principalities, 1750–1830” examines the shifts in fashion and

  consumption patterns north of the Danube by focusing on both Western
European

  perceptions of Romanians and the ways in which Romanian women used clothes,

  fashion accessories, household items, and luxury imports to express a new

  identity. Problematizing the conventional East-West dichotomy, the simultaneous

  presence of Ottoman, Russian, and French influences in Romania serves as the

  backdrop against which consumer practices by elite women patterned new norms

  of femininity, bourgeois individualism, and national culture.

  By contrast, Ýrvin Cemil Schick’s “Christian Maidens, Turkish Ravishers:

  The Sexualization of National Conflict in the Late Ottoman Period” discusses

  women’s bodies as symbolic sites of Turkish violence against subject populations.

  War as sexual conquest—a trope widely used in art and literature and deeply

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  Women In the ottoman Balkans

  engrained in the European collective memory—was a powerful discursive tool

  for mobilizing public opinion in support of independence movements struggling

  against Ottoman rule. Blended with orientalist motifs such as Asiatic despotism,

  gender and sexual stereotypes were deployed with great political efficacy in the

  works of Victor Hugo, Lord Byron, and other, less prominent, writers and artists,

  influencing the course of events not only then but even today.

  ***

  The picture emerging from this collection of essays is one of fluid identities

  and porous ethno-religious boundaries, of authorities at times coercive and at

  times pragmatic, of women often oppressed but aware of and willing to demand

  their legal rights, of jurists trying to balance divine law with the imperatives of

  a multi-confessional empire, of gender roles extending far beyond the traditional

  public/private dichotomy. Women in the Ottoman Balkans were founders of pious

  endowments, labor organizers, and conspicuous consumers of western luxury

  goods; they were lovers, wives, castaways, divorcées, and widows, symbols and

  agents, the subjects of ballads and the narrators of folk tales, victims of communal

  oppression and protectors of their communities against supernatural forces. For

  too long, history plain and simple has meant the history of men; it is high time to

  view the history of women as history plain and simple.

  Notes

 

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