"Correspondence is equal to half a meeting": the composition and comprehension of letters in eighteenth-century Islamic Eurasia

Sood, G. D. S.ORCID logo (2007). "Correspondence is equal to half a meeting": the composition and comprehension of letters in eighteenth-century Islamic Eurasia. Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, 50(2/3), 172-214.
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This article details the social and cultural mechanisms by which correspondence in Arabic- and Latin-script languages was written, understood and preserved in mid-eighteenth-century Islamic Eurasia. Aside from two major differences in letter-writing culture, which were embodied in the choice of script, the resident communities of Islamic Eurasia approached correspondence in a similar fashion. Perhaps surprisingly, there is no correlation between these practices and the author's ethnicity or nationality. This is strong evidence for the autonomy and universality of custom in a region on the cusp of massive changes in its relationship to Europe.

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