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ID158076
Title ProperHygienic beauty
Other Title Information discussing Ottoman-Muslim female beauty, health and hygiene in the Hamidian Era
LanguageENG
AuthorBurçak, Berrak
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article examines discussions on Ottoman-Muslim female beauty, health and hygiene in the Hamidian Era (1876–1909). Analysing the Hamidian popular press, advice literature and textbooks for girls, the article argues that these discussions were more than just female ‘physical culture’ debates, involving larger issues of late-Ottoman regeneration. Wars, epidemics, massive migration movements and fluctuations in population pushed the late-Ottoman state to create healthy generations as a productive force to secure the Empire's future in general and the Ottoman Muslim population's welfare in particular. Maintaining good health expanded from a religious obligation into now also becoming a patriotic duty incumbent upon Ottoman subjects knowing and applying modern hygienic principles. Focus on Ottoman-Muslim women's procreativity shifted female beauty into a public discussion, now defined as a reflection of health. The new hygienic beauty discourse distinguished between preserving vs. harming one's health in the face of Western fashions and cosmetics: healthy beauty mirrored a ‘good complexion’.
`In' analytical NoteMiddle Eastern Studies Vol. 54, No.3; May 2018: p.343-360
Journal SourceMiddle Eastern Studies Vol: 54 No 3
Key WordsHealth ;  Beauty ;  Hygiene ;  Ottoman-Muslim Women ;  Cosmetics ;  Abdulhamid II


 
 
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