Prisoner of the Infidels: The Memoir of an Ottoman Muslim in Seventeenth-Century Europe
Victor Hugo meets Papillon in this effervescent memoir of war, slavery, and self-discovery, told with aplomb and humor in its first English translation. A pioneering work of Ottoman Turkish literature, Prisoner of the Infidels brings the seventeenth-century memoir of Osman Agha of Timişoara-slave, a...
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Victor Hugo meets Papillon in this effervescent
memoir of war, slavery, and self-discovery, told with aplomb and
humor in its first English translation. A pioneering work
of Ottoman Turkish literature, Prisoner of the Infidels
brings the seventeenth-century memoir of Osman Agha of
Timişoara-slave, adventurer, and diplomat-into English for the
first time. The sweeping story of Osman's life begins upon his
capture and subsequent enslavement during the Ottoman-Habsburg
Wars. Adrift in a landscape far from his home and traded from one
master to another, Osman tells a tale of indignation and betrayal
but also of wonder and resilience, punctuated with queer trysts,
back-alley knife fights, and elaborate ruses to regain his freedom.
Throughout his adventures, Osman is forced to come to terms with
his personhood and sense of belonging: What does it mean to be
alone in a foreign realm and treated as subhuman chattel, yet
surrounded by those who see him as an object of exotic desire or
even genuine affection? Through his eyes, we are treated to an
intimate view of seventeenth-century Europe from the singular
perspective of an insider/outsider, who by the end his account can
no longer reckon the boundary between Islam and Christendom,
between the land of his capture and the land of his birth, or even
between slavery and redemption. |
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DOI: | 10.2307/j.ctv269fvsq |