Skip to product information
1 of 1

When the War Came Home

Regular price $30.00
Regular price $30.00 Sale price $30.00
Sold out
The Ottoman Empire was unprepared for the massive conflict of World War I. Lacking the infrastructure and resources necessary to wage a modern war, the empire's statesmen reached beyond the battlef...
Read More
  • 13 March 2018
View Product Details

The Ottoman Empire was unprepared for the massive conflict of World War I. Lacking the infrastructure and resources necessary to wage a modern war, the empire's statesmen reached beyond the battlefield to sustain their war effort. They placed unprecedented hardships onto the shoulders of the Ottoman people: mass conscription, a state-controlled economy, widespread food shortages, and ethnic cleansing. By war's end, few aspects of Ottoman daily life remained untouched.

When the War Came Home reveals the catastrophic impact of this global conflict on ordinary Ottomans. Drawing on a wide range of sources—from petitions, diaries, and newspapers to folk songs and religious texts—Yiğit Akın examines how Ottoman men and women experienced war on the home front as government authorities intervened ever more ruthlessly in their lives. The horrors of war brought home, paired with the empire's growing demands on its people, fundamentally reshaped interactions between Ottoman civilians, the military, and the state writ broadly. Ultimately, Akın argues that even as the empire lost the war on the battlefield, it was the destructiveness of the Ottoman state's wartime policies on the home front that led to the empire's disintegration.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $30.00
Pages: 288
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Publication Date: 13 March 2018
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503604902
Format: Paperback
REVIEWS Icon
"When the War Came Home is an authoritative social history among the many recent works on the Ottoman experience of World War I. Based on an imaginative array of sources, Yiğit Akın portrays meticulously and eloquently the upended lives of civilians and soldiers in the morass of the Middle East's fateful war."—Hasan Kayalı, University of California, San Diego
Yiğit Akın is Assistant Professor of History at Tulane University.
Introduction
1. From the Balkan Wars to the Great War
2. From the Fields to the Ranks
3. Filling the Ranks, Emptying Homes
4. Feeding the Army, Starving the People
5. In the Home: Wives and Mothers
6. On the Road: Refugees and Deportees
Conclusion