Vol. 18 No. 3 (2021): Walking
Articles

Outside the house but not in the city: Promenades in Istanbul as negotiated public spaces for women in 19th-century Ottoman novels

Ela Çil
Department of Architecture, Faculty of Architecture, Izmir Institute of Technology, Izmir, Turkey
Ayşe Nur Şenel Fidangenç
Department of Design and Architecture, Faculty of Architecture and Design, Pamukkale University, Denizli, Turkey

Published 2021-11-01

Keywords

  • Copeland method,
  • Cost,
  • Sound insulation,
  • TOPSIS method

How to Cite

Çil, E., & Nur Şenel Fidangenç, A. (2021). Outside the house but not in the city: Promenades in Istanbul as negotiated public spaces for women in 19th-century Ottoman novels. A|Z ITU JOURNAL OF THE FACULTY OF ARCHITECTURE, 18(3), 703–717. https://doi.org/10.5505/itujfa.2021.80000

Abstract

Drawing on from feminist literary theory, this article analyses the first Ottoman novels working within and consolidating the patriarchal discourse published in the rampant modernization period in the second half of 19th century, which is also named the Tanzimat (Reorganization) era of the Ottoman Empire. Having Istanbul as their settings, the discourse of the novels tackle with delineating the limits to the social and cultural transformations, which the novels’ writers perceive to be the direct result of Western influence. The novels have a didactic style aimed for guiding their readers to shield certain values, which they think hold the core of Ottoman identity, from the changes. We argue that the discourse of the novels manifest ambivalence regarding the inevitable presence of women outside the house and negotiate with their readers on the place and practices of publicness. No matter how popular and crowded they had then become, the promenades, were where the male writers aimed to confine women in their outings. At one level, their emphasis on the promenades is related with the conceptualization of nature as a safe space in the context of a modernizing city. And, on the other level, they want to keep Muslim women away from Pera, the Westernized and cosmopolitan district, in Istanbul.