Autobiographies and Weak Ties: Sa'in al-Din Turka's Self-Narratives

被引:0
|
作者
Binbas, Ilker Evrim [1 ]
机构
[1] Rheinische Friedrich Wilhelms Univ Bonn, Inst Orient & Asienwissensch, Bonn, Germany
关键词
D O I
10.1017/S0020743821000362
中图分类号
K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ;
摘要
As I write this essay, the forty-fourth US President Barack Obama's autobiography titled A Promised Land is the best-selling book in Germany, in both the German and the English editions. This is his second autobiographical work, following Dreams from My Father in 1995. Given Obama's prominent place in our modern political culture, this is hardly surprising, but today's publishers seem to have no specific criteria for deciding whose life and career are worthy of an autobiography. Any moderately successful individual from any walk of life can publish an autobiography today. The popularity of the genre is certainly related to the extreme glorification of individual and personal success in modern society, but it also shapes how we view premodern self-narratives: as a window into an intellectual's individuality and Bildung. This essay questions this convention and explores the opportunities that self-narratives embedded in literary and narrative sources present to historians of 15th-century Iran and Central Asia. I will argue that autobiographies and self-narratives are much more than tools for refashioning the self in the early modern period. They open a window to a much wider network of weak ties and acquaintances, a closer scrutiny of which may allow us to reconstruct transregional networks, understand the connectedness of these intellectual networks, and delineate their collective identities in the early modern period. In my discussion I will focus on a selection of 15th-century texts, most prominently the self-narratives of the Timurid intellectual SaMODIFIER LETTER RIGHT HALF RINGin al-Din Turka (d. 1432).
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页码:309 / 313
页数:5
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