Burkay PasinPasin, Burkay2025-10-0620220353-15892334-880110.21301/eap.v17i4.2http://dx.doi.org/10.21301/eap.v17i4.2https://gcris.yasar.edu.tr/handle/123456789/5784https://doi.org/10.21301/eap.v17i4.2This paper examines diverse conceptions of homosociality in pre-modern and modern societies and discusses how these conceptions are politically socially culturally and spatially constructed and transformed throughout history particularly during the modernization processes of the mid-19th century. Concentrating on two significant homosocial spaces men's coffeehouse and women's section of the Ottoman-Turkish baths it aims to demonstrate how homosociality is spatialized through the dissolution of the public/private dichotomy as well as constructions of functionality in pre-modern Ottoman society. The paper follows a historical interpretative research methodology. Based on data derived from the second-hand sources available in the literature the privatized public complex homoerotic and multi-functional characteristics of these homosocial spaces and their extensions towards and reflections on the Ottoman urban neighborhoods are critically analyzed and interpreted. The dissolution of the public/private dichotomy in these spaces also exemplifies the Foucaultian concept of heterotopia. The paper concludes that these traditional spaces and their modern versions demonstrate the constructedness of both gender categories and patriarchal structures.Englishinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccesshomosociality, homosocial space, public/private, functionality, heterotopiaPublic/privateHeterotopiaHomosocialityFunctionalityHomosocial SpaceRevisiting Homosociality and Homosocial Spaces in Pre-Modern Ottoman SocietyArticle