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ID134750
Title ProperFeeding the city
Other Title Informationthe Beirut municipality and the politics of food during world war I
LanguageENG
AuthorTanielian, Melanie Schulze
Summary / Abstract (Note)
World War I in the Ottoman Empire was a humanitarian disaster of unprecedented scale. By 1916 in the Greater Syrian provinces, men, women, and children were dying en masse of a war-induced famine so devastating that popular memory still names this war ḥarb al-majāʿa (the war of famine). Despite the civilian catastrophe, people's experiences on the Ottoman home front have been only marginally explored in the scholarship. Focusing on the city of Beirut, this article highlights the centrality of food provisioning in the competition for political legitimacy in the provincial capital. Through a detailed analysis of how the Beirut municipality was represented in the city's daily newspaper al-Ittihad al-ʿUthmani, I argue that for local reform-minded notables and intellectuals the war presented an opportunity to prove, both to the local population and to the Ottoman state, that issues related to the internal security and well-being of the Beirut province generally and the city specifically could be dealt with locally through existing governing bodies. The article thus traces the fierce political games played around the issue of food by various actors seeking to win the hearts of Beirutis through their stomachs.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Journal of Middle East Studies Vol.46, No.4; Nov.2014: p.737-758
Journal SourceInternational Journal of Middle East Studies 2014-12 46, 4
Key WordsOttoman State ;  Political Legitimacy ;  World War I ;  War of Famine ;  Food provisioning ;  Beirut Municipality ;  Politics of Food