Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/1893/28201
Appears in Collections: | History and Politics Journal Articles |
Peer Review Status: | Refereed |
Title: | The Balkanization of Ottoman Rule: Premodern Origins of the Modern International System in Southeastern Europe |
Author(s): | Hoffmann, Clemens |
Contact Email: | clemens.hoffmann@stir.ac.uk |
Keywords: | Historical sociology interstate system modern sovereignty nationalism Ottoman Empire |
Issue Date: | 1-Dec-2008 |
Date Deposited: | 7-Nov-2018 |
Citation: | Hoffmann C (2008) The Balkanization of Ottoman Rule: Premodern Origins of the Modern International System in Southeastern Europe. Cooperation and Conflict, 43 (4), pp. 373-396. https://doi.org/10.1177/0010836708096881 |
Abstract: | The term 'Balkanization' has found entry in the social sciences vocabulary as a metaphor for diversity at best, social and political instability for the most part, and genocidal war at worst. And yet it is precisely the emergence of a variety of national states and the Ottoman Empire’s disintegration that are frequently portrayed as processes of 'modernizing' as well as 'naturalizing' the international system of the Balkans and the Middle East. By offering a historical sociological re-construction of early modern Ottoman history up to the Greek Revolt in 1821, I argue in this article that the national secessions were not synonymous with the creation of a 'modern' international system in southeastern Europe. National independence cannot therefore be understood as a functional derivate of an expanding European Modernity mediated through global capitalism or geopolitical competition. Rather, the various secessions were the result of a series of conservative reactions to the modernization efforts of the Ottoman central administration. National state formation and Ottoman disintegration, on the one hand, and capitalist development and modern sovereignty on the other, have thus to be seen rather as having historically and socially distinct origins than as representing two sides of the same coin of a totalizing form of European international modernity. |
DOI Link: | 10.1177/0010836708096881 |
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