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Marc D. Baer

Assistant Professor of History, History
School of Humanities

Ph.D., University of Chicago, 2001

Phone: (949) 824-4929
Fax: (949) 824-2865
Email: mdbaer@uci.edu

University of California
253 Krieger Hall
Mail Code: 3275
Irvine, CA 92697

picture of Marc D.  Baer

Research
Interests
History of religion, Ottoman and Islamic history, Ethnicity and identity, Gender
   
Academic
Distinctions
Humboldt Fellowship, Freiburg University, Germany, 2006-2007
University of California, Humanities Research Institute, Fellow, winter 2006
Fulbright Fellowship, Istanbul, Turkey, autumn 2005
   
Research
Abstract
In my work I historicize the concept of conversion, which can denote changing from one religion to another, becoming an observant member of one’s own religion, or radically transforming social and cultural practices and other means of identification.

My first book is entitled Honored by the Glory of Islam: Conversion and Conquest in Ottoman Empire. In it I propose a novel approach to the historical record of Islamic conversions during the Ottoman age and gather fresh insights concerning the nature of religious conversion itself. Rather than attempting to explain Ottoman Islamization in terms of the converts’ motives, I instead concentrate on the proselytizers—in this case, none other than the sultan himself. Mehmed IV (1648-87) is remembered as an aloof ruler whose ineffectual governing led to the disastrous siege of Vienna. Through an integrated reading of previously unexamined Ottoman literary texts, I underscore instead the sultan’s zeal for bringing converts to Islam.

As an expression of his rededication to Islam, Mehmed IV actively sought to establish his reputation as a convert-maker, convincing or compelling Christian and Jewish subjects to be “honored by the glory of Islam,” and Muslim subjects to turn to Islamic piety. Revising the conventional portrayal of a ruler so distracted by his passion for hunting that he neglected affairs of state, I show that Mehmed IV saw his religious involvement as central to his role as sultan. I trace an ever-widening range of reform, conversion, and conquest expanding outward from the heart of Mehmed IV’s empire.

This account is the first to correlate the conversion of people and space in the mature Ottoman Empire, to investigate conversion from the perspective of changing Ottoman ideology, and to depict the sultan as an interventionist convert maker. The resulting insights promise to rework our understandings of the reign of a forgotten ruler, a largely neglected period in Ottoman history, the changing nature of Islam and its history in Europe, relations between Muslims, Christians, and Jews in Europe, the practice of jihad, and religious architecture in urban history

Along with researching religious conversion in the early modern Ottoman Empire, I also explore cultural conversion, or the conversion from religious to secular identities in modern Europe. My second book, Secret Jews, Cosmopolitanism, and the End of Empire: The Donme of Salonica, which is based on architectural, epigraphic, oral, archival, literary, and official sources I have collected or recorded in Salonica, Greece, and Istanbul, concerns the struggles faced by a hybrid religious community as the plural Ottoman society organized around religious identities was replaced by the Turkish Republic which aimed to create a single, homogenous, secular culture. The experience of the Dönme, descendants of Jews who converted to Islam in the seventeenth century in the wake of the messianic movement of Shabbatai Tzevi, yet who maintained into the twentieth century a unique religion that was distinct from Judaism and Islam, illustrates the problems that accompanied radical social transformation in the period from the 1880s to 1945. The study contributes to debates concerning race, ethnicity, and the construction of majorities and minorities, and the scholarly literature on identification, nationalism, citizenship, and secularization as it follows the experience of the Donme in Ottoman Salonica, Greek Salonica, and finally Turkish Istanbul.

My research greatly influences the courses I teach at UCI. Recent courses include Comparative Religious Conversion, Islamic Empires, and Problems in History: Middle East/Africa.
   
Publications "Manliness, Male Virtue, and History Writing at the Seventeenth-Century Ottoman Court," forthcoming, Gender & History, April 2008
   
  “The Great Fire of 1660 and the Islamization of Christian and Jewish Space in Istanbul.” International Journal of Middle East Studies Volume 36, Number 2 (May 2004): 159-181.
   
  “Islamic Conversion Narratives of Women: Social Change and Gendered Religious Hierarchy in Early Modern Ottoman Istanbul.” Gender & History Volume 16, Number 2 (August 2004): 425-458.
   
  “The Double Bind of Race and Religion: The Conversion of the Dönme to Turkish Secular Nationalism.” Comparative Studies in Society and History Volume 46, Number 4 (October 2004): 682-708.
   
  "Messiah King or Rebel? Jewish and Ottoman Reactions to Sabbatai Sevi's Arrival in Istanbul," Kabbalah: Journal for the Study of Jewish Mystical Texts 9 (2003): 153-74
   
Link to this profile http://www.faculty.uci.edu/profile.cfm?faculty_id=5360
   
Last updated 10/02/2007