“The book rescues the study of nationality in the late Ottoman Empire from the demonizing vantages (‘Ottoman oppression’ on the one hand and ethno-nationalist ‘treachery’ on the other) prevalent in the scholarship and situates it in world-historical processes. It addresses both the pre-1914 period and World War I and thus bridges a chronological divide entrenched in the historiography while offering a comparative and relational analysis of multiple ethno-national groups.”
—Hasan Kayali, author of Arabs and Young Turks: Ottomanism, Arabism, and Islamism in the Ottoman Empire, 1908-1918
“A critical contribution to the historiography of the Young Turk period and the Ottoman Empire’s final decade. Students of the Middle East and WWI will find a rich description of the tensions between the empire’s nationalities and the CUP government. Scholars of the empire and the Middle East will find the insights that it brings to each nation’s struggle and challenges, as well as the abundance of primary source material employed, very useful. ...a must read for anyone interested in the Ottoman Empire, WWI, the Middle East, or any one of the empire’s various nationalities.”—The American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences