The Practice of Writing Curricula Vitae among the Lower Government Employees in the Late Ottoman Empire: Workers at the Şeyhülislâm’s Office

The personnel records collection of the Ottoman Şeyhülislâm’s Office contains the dossiers of the ancillary workers who served at the bureaus and the Sharia courts in the early twentieth century. Drawing on these rare materials, this article examines the practice of writing curricula vitae (CVs) amo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jun Akiba
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association pour la Recherche sur le Moyen-Orient 2007-12-01
Series:European Journal of Turkish Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ejts/1503
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spelling doaj-3b0a83cfcaaf4828a35175e73aa1bc982021-02-09T13:42:39ZengAssociation pour la Recherche sur le Moyen-OrientEuropean Journal of Turkish Studies1773-05462007-12-01610.4000/ejts.1503The Practice of Writing Curricula Vitae among the Lower Government Employees in the Late Ottoman Empire: Workers at the Şeyhülislâm’s OfficeJun AkibaThe personnel records collection of the Ottoman Şeyhülislâm’s Office contains the dossiers of the ancillary workers who served at the bureaus and the Sharia courts in the early twentieth century. Drawing on these rare materials, this article examines the practice of writing curricula vitae (CVs) among the workers to understand to what degree and in which manner they had access to and made use of written words, with special focus on the workers from Pütürge in the Kurdish speaking regions of Eastern Anatolia. The language skills and the education of the workers expressed in their CVs indicate that most of them acquired some sort of literacy, which was different from the literacy required to write official documents. Thus, they usually had scribes write their CVs on their behalf. While the involvement of the scribes in the process of writing CVs belies the general assumption that writing is an individual act, this and other practices of the workers undermined some of the basic principles of the working of the Ottoman bureaucracy based on the written documents. Still, they knew the value and usage of written documents and thus were able to deal with the written culture of the Ottoman bureaucracy.http://journals.openedition.org/ejts/1503literacyeducationSicill-i Ahvalbureaucracyworkers
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jun Akiba
spellingShingle Jun Akiba
The Practice of Writing Curricula Vitae among the Lower Government Employees in the Late Ottoman Empire: Workers at the Şeyhülislâm’s Office
European Journal of Turkish Studies
literacy
education
Sicill-i Ahval
bureaucracy
workers
author_facet Jun Akiba
author_sort Jun Akiba
title The Practice of Writing Curricula Vitae among the Lower Government Employees in the Late Ottoman Empire: Workers at the Şeyhülislâm’s Office
title_short The Practice of Writing Curricula Vitae among the Lower Government Employees in the Late Ottoman Empire: Workers at the Şeyhülislâm’s Office
title_full The Practice of Writing Curricula Vitae among the Lower Government Employees in the Late Ottoman Empire: Workers at the Şeyhülislâm’s Office
title_fullStr The Practice of Writing Curricula Vitae among the Lower Government Employees in the Late Ottoman Empire: Workers at the Şeyhülislâm’s Office
title_full_unstemmed The Practice of Writing Curricula Vitae among the Lower Government Employees in the Late Ottoman Empire: Workers at the Şeyhülislâm’s Office
title_sort practice of writing curricula vitae among the lower government employees in the late ottoman empire: workers at the şeyhülislâm’s office
publisher Association pour la Recherche sur le Moyen-Orient
series European Journal of Turkish Studies
issn 1773-0546
publishDate 2007-12-01
description The personnel records collection of the Ottoman Şeyhülislâm’s Office contains the dossiers of the ancillary workers who served at the bureaus and the Sharia courts in the early twentieth century. Drawing on these rare materials, this article examines the practice of writing curricula vitae (CVs) among the workers to understand to what degree and in which manner they had access to and made use of written words, with special focus on the workers from Pütürge in the Kurdish speaking regions of Eastern Anatolia. The language skills and the education of the workers expressed in their CVs indicate that most of them acquired some sort of literacy, which was different from the literacy required to write official documents. Thus, they usually had scribes write their CVs on their behalf. While the involvement of the scribes in the process of writing CVs belies the general assumption that writing is an individual act, this and other practices of the workers undermined some of the basic principles of the working of the Ottoman bureaucracy based on the written documents. Still, they knew the value and usage of written documents and thus were able to deal with the written culture of the Ottoman bureaucracy.
topic literacy
education
Sicill-i Ahval
bureaucracy
workers
url http://journals.openedition.org/ejts/1503
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