Healing the Nation : Prisoners of War, Medicine and Nationalism in Turkey, 1914-1939
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10
0748665781
ISBN-13
9780748665785
Publisher
Edinburgh University Press
Imprint
Edinburgh University Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Apr 24th, 2013
Print length
320 Pages
Weight
632 grams
Dimensions
24.00 x 16.10 x 2.30 cms
Product Classification:
Middle Eastern history20th century history: c 1900 to c 2000
Ksh 20,700.00
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Explores how the Great War influenced the construction of identity and nationalism in the Ottoman Empire. This title also explores how, during the First World War, Ottoman prisoners of war and military doctors discursively constructed their nation as a community, and at the same time attempted to exclude certain groups from that nation.
What did Ottoman prisoners of war imprisoned in Russia and Egypt during the Great War understand of nation, culture and Islam? And what role did science play in the imagined future of the nation for the Ottoman-Turkish psychiatrists who diagnosed prisoners following post-war repatriation?
Doctors'' interpretation of prisoners'' health issues led to far-reaching questions about the relationship between the prisoners'' physical bodies and mental states on the one hand, and the body politic and collective mentality of the Turkish Republic during the interwar period, on the other.
During the interwar years, when the military''s vigour was still taken to be a reflection of the nation''s health, doctors projected the worrisome picture of the shattered nerves of both prisoner and non-prisoner alike onto the nation at large. The Great War revealed the poor health of the nation and gave medical men the chance to regenerate it through eugenics. Just as officer prisoners in the camps excluded ignorant peasants from their discursive construction of the nation, the psychiatrists disqualified those seen to threaten the nation''s body.
Doctors'' interpretation of prisoners'' health issues led to far-reaching questions about the relationship between the prisoners'' physical bodies and mental states on the one hand, and the body politic and collective mentality of the Turkish Republic during the interwar period, on the other.
During the interwar years, when the military''s vigour was still taken to be a reflection of the nation''s health, doctors projected the worrisome picture of the shattered nerves of both prisoner and non-prisoner alike onto the nation at large. The Great War revealed the poor health of the nation and gave medical men the chance to regenerate it through eugenics. Just as officer prisoners in the camps excluded ignorant peasants from their discursive construction of the nation, the psychiatrists disqualified those seen to threaten the nation''s body.
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