Women, War and Work in the Ottoman Empire: Society for the Employment of Ottoman Muslim Women (1916-1923)

World War I deeply altered the lives of Muslim Ottoman women. The Ottoman Army consisted only of Muslim men and war caused the death of one and a half million Muslim Ottoman men. The heavy losses of the Ottoman army meant that every day more and more dependants lost their breadwinners. When the breadwinner had gone to war, was wounded or died at the front; the wives, daughters, sisters and mothers they had left behind were faced with two options: to find work and make a living, or to starve to death...

On 14 August 1916, the Committee of Union and Progress (İttihâd ve Terakkî Cemiyeti), the ruling party of the Ottoman Empire, established a new society under the leadership of one of its leading figures: Vice-Commander and Minister of War, Enver Paşa. The Society for the Employment of Ottoman Muslim Women (Kadınları Çalıştırma Cemiyet-i İslâmiyesi) was a Unionist organization created to find employment for Muslim Ottoman women who were in urgent economic need. Within a matter of months, it received more than 14,000 applications and was soon employing 8,194 destitute Ottoman women in its braches and in the related state and military institutions. In time, it would offer jobs to an aggregate number of 20,000 women workers, and became the leading employer of Muslim Ottoman women in the Ottoman Empire.

This comprehensive work constitutes both a case study of Muslim Ottoman women during World War I, and a detailed analysis of the foundation, organization and activities of the Society for the Employment of Ottoman Muslim Women, created to find employment for them.


Satın Al

Künye

Kitabın Adı:

Women, War and Work in the Ottoman Empire: Society for the Employment of Ottoman Muslim Women (1916-1923)

Yazan:

Yavuz Selim Karakışla

Baskı tarihi

2015

Dizi Adı:

History - 123

Baskı Adedi:

100

Sayfa:

582

Ebat:

13.5 x 21 cm.

Kağıt:

Enso 60gr.

Kapak:

Lom Tasarım Ofisi

Cilt/Kapak:

300 gr. Mat, Amerikan, 4 Renk

ISBN/Barkod:

978-605-9022-43-9

İçindekiler

A General Overview

World War I as a Total War

Nation and Gender

Casualties

Winners and Losers of World War I

The Great Britain: "Bring the Boys Back Home!"

France

The United States of America: "Yankees at War, Females at Work"    

Australia and New Zealand: the "ANZAC"             

Germany: "All Quiet on the Western Front"

Russia: "The Czar is Dead, Long Live the Bolsheviks!" and others: Austria-Hungary, Italy, Bulgaria, and Greece

The Post-War Period

The Ottoman Empire

Issues of Comparison

CHAPTER I: STRUCTURE OF THE SOCIETY

Introduction: Available Sources and Literature  

Foundation

Members

Revenues and Expenditures

The Board of Directors

The Board of Members

The General Manager

The Board of Women

Changes in the Board of Directors and Congresses

The End of the Society

CHAPTER II: BRANCHES, PRODUCTION AND WORKERS

Branches

Production and Workers

Şevkiye: Portrait of a Woman Worker

CHAPTER III: WOMEN WORKERS' BRIGADE

Introduction

Advertisements

Registration and Personal Files

Building and Furniture

Personnel  

Hierarchy among Women: Kâtibes and Me'mûres

Women Workers

Activities

Payments 

Promotion

Marriage and Permissions

Health

Ceremony

Discipline, Disciplinary Committee, Crime and Punishment

Sexual Segregation

Uniforms and Ranks

Revisions

Photographs and Publications

Conclusion

CHAPTER IV: THE CAMPAIGN OF THE SOCIETY TO MARRY OFF WOMEN WORKERS

Introduction

Regulations on Marriage

Marriage Center

First Marriages

Marriage Advertisements

Male and Female Candidates

Mutual Expectations of the Candidates

Reactions of the Ottoman Press

Conclusion

CHAPTER V: THE SOCIETY, ORPHANS OF WAR AND ABANDONED CHILDREN

Introduction

The Campaign of the Society

"Il est mon frère!"  

The Battle over the Custody of Orphans of War and Abandoned Children     

Conclusion 

CONCLUSION

APPENDICES

BIBLIOGRAPHY

INDEX