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ID196673
Title ProperOf hovels and homes
Other Title Informationconsumption, class, and domestic space in early republican Turkey
LanguageENG
AuthorEvered, Kyle T ;  Evered, Emine Ö
Summary / Abstract (Note)In histories of preventing and treating tuberculosis, many physicians came to prioritize the place and role of the home by the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This was as true in the West as it was in the late Ottoman Empire. Also common, practices of scapegoating the poor and other marginalized populations as TB’s sources and carriers were pervasive. In this article, we examine how ideas of health, TB, and home converged to accentuate class in the ostensibly objective public health literature and propaganda of late Ottoman and early republican Turkey. Analyzing both textual and graphic narratives found in primary sources written in Ottoman Turkish, our study explores how officials – lacking resources and alternatives – opted to pursue ambitious public health propaganda campaigns to at least achieve broad educational inoculation of the population. In doing so, rudimentary matters of treatment were taught and legislated in ways that aligned with the contemporary propagation of national citizenship.
`In' analytical NoteMiddle Eastern Studies Vol. 60, No.6; Nov 2024: p.929-947
Journal SourceMiddle Eastern Studies 2024-12 60, 6
Key WordsTurkey ;  Class ;  Tuberculosis ;  Home ;  TB ;  Public health education