Book Talk with Vladimir Hamed-Troyansky: Empire of Refugees: North Caucasian Muslims and The Late Ottoman State

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Book Talk with Vladimir Hamed-Troyansky: Empire of Refugees: North Caucasian Muslims and The Late Ottoman State

Book Talk with Vladimir Hamed-Troyansky: Empire of Refugees: North Caucasian Muslims and The Late Ottoman State

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Transness in Turkey provides an insightful site for developing new perspectives on statecraft, securitization and surveillance, family and kin-making, urban geography, and political life. Zengin offers the concept of violent intimacies to theorize this entangled world of the trans everyday where violence and intimacy are co-constitutive. Violent intimacies emerge from trans people’s everyday interactions with the police, religious and medical institutions, street life, family and kinship, and trans femicides and funerals. The dynamic of violent intimacies prompts new understandings of violence and intimacy and the world-making struggles of trans people in a Middle Eastern context.

Vladimir Hamed-Troyansky (UC Santa Barbara) is an Assistant Professor of Global Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He is an affiliate faculty in History, Religious Studies, and Middle East Studies. Dr. Hamed-Troyansky is a historian of global migration and forced displacement, with expertise in the Ottoman and Russian empires and their successor states. His research interrogates the relationship between refugee mobility, political economy, and ethnic cleansing, which were critical to the making of the modern Middle East and Eastern Europe.

Bruce Grant is Professor and Chair of Anthropology at New York University. A specialist on cultural politics in the former Soviet Union, he has done fieldwork in both Siberia and the Caucasus. He is author of In the Soviet House of Culture: A Century of Perestroikas (Princeton 1995), a study of the Sovietization of an indigenous people on the Russian Pacific coast, and winner of the Prize for Best First Book from the American Ethnological Society; as well as The Captive and the Gift: Cultural Histories of Sovereignty in Russia and the Caucasus (Cornell 2009), on the making of the Caucasus in the Russian popular imagination.

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