Domestic Frontiers: Gender, Reform, and American Interventions in the Ottoman Balkans and the Near East
During the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, American Protestant missionaries attempted to export their religious beliefs and cultural ideals to the Ottoman Empire. Seeking to attract Orthodox Christians and even Muslims to their faith, they promoted the paradigm of the "Christian home" as the foundation of national progress. Yet the missionaries' efforts not only failed to win many converts but also produced some unexpected results.

Drawing on a broad range of sources—Ottoman, Bulgarian, Russian, French, and English—Barbara Reeves-Ellington tracks the transnational history of this little-known episode of American cultural expansion. She shows how issues of gender and race influenced the missionaries' efforts as well as the complex responses of Ottoman subjects to American intrusions into their everyday lives. Women missionaries—married and single—employed the language of Christian domesticity and female moral authority to challenge the male-dominated hierarchy of missionary society and to forge bonds of feminist internationalism. At the same time, Orthodox Christians adapted the missionaries' ideology to their own purposes in developing a new strain of nationalism that undermined Ottoman efforts to stem growing sectarianism within their empire. By the beginning of the twentieth century, as some missionaries began to promote international understanding rather than Protestantism, they also paved the way for future expansion of American political and commercial interests.
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Domestic Frontiers: Gender, Reform, and American Interventions in the Ottoman Balkans and the Near East
During the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, American Protestant missionaries attempted to export their religious beliefs and cultural ideals to the Ottoman Empire. Seeking to attract Orthodox Christians and even Muslims to their faith, they promoted the paradigm of the "Christian home" as the foundation of national progress. Yet the missionaries' efforts not only failed to win many converts but also produced some unexpected results.

Drawing on a broad range of sources—Ottoman, Bulgarian, Russian, French, and English—Barbara Reeves-Ellington tracks the transnational history of this little-known episode of American cultural expansion. She shows how issues of gender and race influenced the missionaries' efforts as well as the complex responses of Ottoman subjects to American intrusions into their everyday lives. Women missionaries—married and single—employed the language of Christian domesticity and female moral authority to challenge the male-dominated hierarchy of missionary society and to forge bonds of feminist internationalism. At the same time, Orthodox Christians adapted the missionaries' ideology to their own purposes in developing a new strain of nationalism that undermined Ottoman efforts to stem growing sectarianism within their empire. By the beginning of the twentieth century, as some missionaries began to promote international understanding rather than Protestantism, they also paved the way for future expansion of American political and commercial interests.
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Domestic Frontiers: Gender, Reform, and American Interventions in the Ottoman Balkans and the Near East

Domestic Frontiers: Gender, Reform, and American Interventions in the Ottoman Balkans and the Near East

by Barbara Reeves-Ellington
Domestic Frontiers: Gender, Reform, and American Interventions in the Ottoman Balkans and the Near East

Domestic Frontiers: Gender, Reform, and American Interventions in the Ottoman Balkans and the Near East

by Barbara Reeves-Ellington

Paperback(First Edition)

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Overview

During the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, American Protestant missionaries attempted to export their religious beliefs and cultural ideals to the Ottoman Empire. Seeking to attract Orthodox Christians and even Muslims to their faith, they promoted the paradigm of the "Christian home" as the foundation of national progress. Yet the missionaries' efforts not only failed to win many converts but also produced some unexpected results.

Drawing on a broad range of sources—Ottoman, Bulgarian, Russian, French, and English—Barbara Reeves-Ellington tracks the transnational history of this little-known episode of American cultural expansion. She shows how issues of gender and race influenced the missionaries' efforts as well as the complex responses of Ottoman subjects to American intrusions into their everyday lives. Women missionaries—married and single—employed the language of Christian domesticity and female moral authority to challenge the male-dominated hierarchy of missionary society and to forge bonds of feminist internationalism. At the same time, Orthodox Christians adapted the missionaries' ideology to their own purposes in developing a new strain of nationalism that undermined Ottoman efforts to stem growing sectarianism within their empire. By the beginning of the twentieth century, as some missionaries began to promote international understanding rather than Protestantism, they also paved the way for future expansion of American political and commercial interests.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781558499812
Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
Publication date: 01/07/2013
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 232
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.70(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Barbara Reeves-Ellington is associate professor of history at Siena College.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations ix

Acknowledgments xi

A Note on Terminology xv

Introduction: The Home as the Focus of Women's Civilizing Mission 1

1 Missionary Families and the Contested Concept of Home 17

2 Education, Conversion, and Bulgarian Orthodox Nationalism 50

3 The Mission Press and Bulgarian Domestic Reform 78

4 Unconventional Couples-Gender, Race, and Power in Mission Politics 108

5 The Constantinople Home 140

Conclusion 166

Notes 175

Index 205

What People are Saying About This

Mary A. Renda

A fine-grained analysis of efforts to spread American culture and religion to a region that has been neglected in studies of U.S. empire and of the crucial and far-reaching implications of those efforts in Europe, the Middle East, and the United States.... I believe this will be an important book.

Heather J. Sharkey

A sophisticated and engaging study of American missionaries in the Ottoman Empire.... In crystal-clear and vivid prose, Barbara Reeves-Ellington shows how both American and Bulgarian women drew from and contributed to the opportunities that the American mission to the region provided, while challenging expectations about gender relations and women's behavior.

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