Precarities of Plenty: Ottoman Famine and the Ecology of Debt (Agrarian Studies Colloquium)

Precarities of Plenty: Ottoman Famine and the Ecology of Debt (Agrarian Studies Colloquium)

Friday, February 7, 2025
11:00 AM
Online via Zoom, and 230 Prospect Street, Room 101
Matthew Ghazarian, Yale University
Matthew Hagop Ghazarian, Postdoctoral Associate at the Program in Agrarian Studies at Yale University, will present the next Agrarian Studies paper of the Spring 2025 semester. For these seminars, participants send papers in advance that are the focus of an organized discussion by the faculty and graduate students associated with the colloquium. Meetings are held in a hybrid format, both on Zoom and in-person at 230 Prospect Street, Room 101, on Fridays 11am–1pm Eastern.
 
Please contact agrarian.studies@yale.edu to receive the meeting information and the password to download the paper from the Agrarian Studies website.
 
Matthew Hagop Ghazarian works on social history, political economy, and political ecology in the late Ottoman Empire and modern Middle East. He is currently a postdoctoral associate at the Program in Agrarian Studies at Yale University. He holds a Ph.D., M.Phil., and M.A. from Columbia University’s Department of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies and an A.B. in Government from Harvard University. His current research focuses on ethnic divides, rural life, and famine in the eastern provinces of the Ottoman Empire. Following new social visions in tandem with re-organizations of food, capital, and land, his work traces their interplay at key moments to show how rigid notions of social difference gained currency among rural people. His work brings together social, economic, and environmental history to explain the development of these increasingly conflict-prone social categories, which would become the fault lines for violence and partition at the end of empire.
 
Ghazarian’s other work has examined marriage, sex, and violence in the late Ottoman Empire as well as histories of technology and infrastructure in the neighboring South Caucasus. He has also been a member of the editors collective of Ottoman History Podcast since 2015 and has produced episodes in English and Turkish on topics ranging from Ottoman history, Islamic thought, Armenian Studies, and Science and Technology Studies. He has taught in the Department of History at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures and the Armenian Studies Program at the University of California, Berkeley; and the Program on Environmental Science & Policy at Smith College.