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Donald Quataert papers

 Collection
Identifier: BUA-0035

Scope and Contents

The Donald Quataert papers document the teaching, research, and writing of Donald Quataert. Records include his research notes, drafts and published versions of his written works, CVs and records of his professional activities, History Department minutes and correspondence, personal correspondence, publishing contracts and financial documents, and teaching materials. The majority of the collection focuses on Quataert's scholarship on Ottoman social and economic history.

Dates

  • Creation: 1943 - 2011
  • Creation: Majority of material found within 1968 - 2011

Conditions Governing Access

Materials in this collection have been thoroughly reviewed for possible restrictions. Some folders in the collection have been designated as restricted, and these designations can be found in the title information for those folders in this finding aid. Restricted materials are generally either materials related to graduate students who studied under Quataert or information related to promotion and tenure of his colleagues. If you have questions about the restricted materials or wish to access this collection, please email speccoll@binghamton.edu

Biographical Note

Donald Quataert (1941–2011) was a Distinguished Professor at Binghamton University and a scholar of Ottoman labor and social history.

From Donald Quataert's obituary in Perspectives on History:

"Donald Quataert (1941–2011), Distinguished Professor, State University of New York, and internationally known scholar of Ottoman labor and social history, died February 10, 2011. Quataert left an indelible impact on the field through his innovative scholarship writing history from below and tireless mentoring of graduate students and younger scholars in the field. After earning his BA in history at Boston University in 1966, he received the MA in Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard University in 1968, and the PhD in history from UCLA in 1973. He taught at the University of Houston from 1974 to 1986 and, after a year on an NEH fellowship, joined the faculty at Binghamton University in 1987. As a testament to his prominence, Quataert received numerous prestigious scholarships and fellowships including two NEH awards, grants from the Social Science Research Council and a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation fellowship.

"Quataert was one of the world’s most prominent and influential historians of the late Ottoman empire, pioneering the study of labor and social history through his many studies of the lives and worlds of workers, peasants, and artisans in their full social, gender, and ethnic complexities. When much of the scholarship centered on leaders and state elites, he focused on ordinary people, those who typically are left out of the historical narrative. This work was made possible by his broad archival and primary source research over the decades, which moved beyond and against the grain of state documents, and also rested on primary sources he discovered outside of the imperial Ottoman archives. A prolific writer, Quataert authored eight monographs and nine edited and co-edited books, and published nearly 60 scholarly articles. Most noteworthy were Social Disintegration and Popular Resistance in the Ottoman Empire, 1800–1908: Reactions to European Economic Penetration (1983); Ottoman Manufacturing in the Age of the Industrial Revolution (1993); with Halil Inalcik, An Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire, 1300–1914 (Cambridge series, 1994); and, most recently, Miners and the State in the Ottoman Empire: The Zonguldak Coalfield, 1822–1920 (2006). He also wrote The Ottoman Empire, 1700–1922 (2000), now in its second edition, a highly regarded and widely used textbook on Ottoman history that introduces countless students and general readers to the Ottoman past. This text has been translated into Turkish, Greek, Portuguese, Korean, Arabic, and Italian. He also helped pioneer consumption studies in Ottoman history and numerous scholarly conferences in the United States and abroad were organized around findings and arguments from his many publications. Because of his international reputation, Donald Quataert was often on radio (notably NPR), interviewed as part of a one-hour documentary produced by Lucasfilm on The Ottoman Empire: A World of Difference (2007), and appeared in the History Channel’s segment on the longevity of the Ottoman Empire. A strong advocate for social and global justice, he gave many public lectures in his community on important contemporary issues in Middle Eastern society and politics. Reflecting his passion for making visible the lives of the marginalized, with John Chalcraft, London School of Economics and Political Science, he launched an ongoing web-based archive of rare, scattered, and difficult to obtain primary sources on history from below, encouraging scholars to use the images and, in turn, contribute their materials to the archive.

"Quataert served the university and wider academic community extremely well, giving generously of his time to the historical profession. He was chair of the history department at Binghamton University from 2000–03 and, earlier, chair of the Faculty Senate from 1996–97, among his other service at the university. He was member and chair of the Institute for Turkish Studies between 1999 and 2006, when he resigned in an academic freedom dispute about the integrity and independence of scholarly inquiry. He also served as member of the Board of Directors of the Turkish Studies Association intermittently from 1974 on and became the association’s president from 1986 to 1988. From 1989 on, he was series editor of The Social and Economic History of the Middle East for SUNY Press and guest editor of the fall 2001 issue of International Labor and Working-Class History. In 2008, he joined the editorial board of the journal. Over the years, he also was on the review panels for many U.S.-based foundations offering fellowships and stipends for travel and research in Ottoman and Turkish history. In 1995, he helped establish the successful dual degree program between Binghamton University and Turkish universities that promotes an exchange of undergraduate students in their sophomore and senior years. Moreover, he transformed the history department at Binghamton University into one of the most successful and competitive institutions for graduate studies in the later Ottoman era."

Extent

11 Linear Feet (12 boxes)

Language of Materials

English

Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928)

Abstract

The Donald Quataert papers document the teaching, research, and writing of Donald Quataert (1941–2011), a Distinguished Professor at Binghamton University and a scholar of Ottoman labor and social history.

Arrangement

This collection has been kept in the order in which it was recieved.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

The Jean and Donald Quataert papers were donated by Eliot Quataert, their son, in 2021.

Related Materials

The Binghamton University Archives also hold the papers of Donald Quataert's wife, Jean Quataert.

Processing Information

In 2024, Madison White, Archival Processing Manager, processed the collection. Materials had been packed from Donald Quataert's filing cabinets into boxes. While these boxes may have gotten out of order, they still contained sections of Quataert's original filing system. Because of this, White kept the files in roughly the smae order in which they had been recieved by the archive. However, she heavily weeded the collection, removing student work protected by FERPA, photocopies of materials in other archives, and photocopies of articles that had been collected by Quataert. She also removed duplicates. She identified several folders which document the work of the Binghamton University History Department, but which had sensitive employee or student information. These folders were retained, but restricted. The files were then listed in the finding aid.

Title
Guide to the Donald Quataert papers
Author
Madison White (Archival Processing Manager)
Date
2025
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the Binghamton University Libraries Special Collections Repository

Contact:
Binghamton NY 13902 USA