Abstract
In post-communist Albania’s schools, alongside regular textbooks of history for teaching the subject, school atlases of history are also employed as a prescribed or adjunct textbook. In the stories and facts related through texts and maps, the Ottoman past is curiously warped and marginalized. As a result, the average Albanian is left incapable of explaining why Albania is a predominantly Muslim polity, but with a considerable degree of tolerant poly-confessionalism. Furthermore, school history education in Albania propagates the unreflective anti-Ottoman feeling encapsulated by the stereotypes of ‘Turkish yoke’ or ‘the five centuries of Turkish occupation.’ This simplistic anti-Ottomanism of Albanian culture and public discourse is strangely at variance with the Muslim and polyconfessional character of Albania.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 96-105 |
| Journal | Revista de Etnologie şi Culturologie |
| Volume | 20 |
| Publication status | Published - 5 Dec 2016 |
Keywords
- Albania
- Ottoman Empire
- National master narrative
- School history education
- School atlases of history
- Politics of history
- Politics of memory
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Shqipëria: mohimi i të kaluarës otomane
Kamusella, T. & Selimi, B. (Editor), 9 Jan 2023, Drini.Translated title of the contribution :Albania: a denial of the Ottoman past Research output: Contribution to specialist publication › Article
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