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GREATER SYRIA (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   130738


These people know about us: a reconsideration of greater Syrian attitudes towards the United States in the first world war era / Patrick, Andrew   Journal Article
Patrick, Andrew Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This article casts a sceptical eye on the seemingly glowing reputation of the United States amongst the elites of Greater Syria during the First World War era. It argues that although this reputation was based on genuine appreciation of good deeds performed by Americans in the region, it was also based on a mistaken impression of the nature of America's global role in this era and was most likely not as emphatic as it sometimes appears in the historical record. In doing this, the article seeks to raise questions about the place that such utterances should occupy in histories of the modern Middle East.
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2
ID:   141814


Women's visibility in petitions from greater Syria during the late Ottoman Period / Zachs, Fruma   Article
Zachs, Fruma Article
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Summary/Abstract This article focuses on petitions by Ottoman women from Greater Syria during the late Ottoman era. After offering a general overview of women's petitions in the Ottoman Empire, it explores changes in women's petitions between 1865 and 1919 through several case studies. The article then discusses women's “double-voiced” petitions following the empire's defeat in World War I, particularly those submitted to the King-Crane Commission. The concept of “double-voiced” petitions, or speaking in a voice that reflects both a dominant and a muted discourse, is extended here from the genre of literary fiction to Ottoman women's petitions. We argue that in Greater Syria double-voiced petitions only began to appear with the empire's collapse, when women both participated in national struggles and strove to protect their rights as women in their own societies.
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