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[ecrea] call for chapters for an edited volume of 'new culture' in Turkey
Fri Jun 23 21:48:18 GMT 2017
Call for Chapters
eds. Daghan Irak, Cagri Yalkin, Suncem Kocer
In the last two decades, Turkey has been going through a massive
metamorphosis virtually in every possible field, as all agencies and
institutions of this once radically secularist state have been
transformed in line with the “New Turkey” project by Recep Tayyip
Erdoğan and his Justice and Development Party (AKP), mostly based on
Islamic and/or conservative principles.
After Erdoğan’s victory in the 2010 Constitutional referendum where the
tutelage of the army over democratic life and the Kemalist elites in
state bureaucracy were effectively eliminated, the last obstacle for
hegemony was indubitably cultural. Despite having had absolutely no
difficulty in scoring landslide electoral victories, the AKP was unable
to contain the growing preoccupations of a large urban population,
predominantly comprised of secular, modern cultural capital owners.
After the 2007 Republican rallies, which mostly aimed at restoring the
old regime, had a limited effect probably due to their reactionary and
nature, the Gezi Park protests in 2013 emerged as a massive backlash
against the growingly repressive new regime, accompanied by
unprecedented democratic alliances between traditionally adverse social
and political layers of society in Turkey. Even though the Gezi Park
protests roughly gathered five million people across the country over a
month, the movement did not fully translate into institutional politics,
and thus it culturally represented a major defeat for Erdoğan’s
inevitable journey to be the uncontested ruler of “New Turkey”. That was
where the JDP project started to have substantial cultural flavours that
seemed to be products of a legitimation crisis: a hectic contemplation
on how to tackle the cultural dissidence, possibly by replacing the
cultural remnants of the old regime with a newly-constructed cultural
narrative. Limiting the Metropolitan Municipalities’ City Theatres
performances, construction of the third Bosphorus Bridge Yavuz Sultan
Selim which aimed to stand as the symbol new Turkey from its pro-Sunni
name to the glorification deforestation, and shifting the ballet, opera,
and theatre performances from Ataturk Cultural Centre to shopping malls
such as Zorlu Centre are but a few projects in aid of a new cultural
narrative. As a result, under the wings of an anti-Western populism
promoted by Erdoğan himself, new cultural creations emerged as
productions of new and old actors of the cultural scene, using the
economic and social capacities of the massive public-private network
established by the AKP. However, the complex and fierce cultural battle
in Turkey is still far away of reaching a conclusion.
We are inviting chapters for an edited book on the cultural landscape in
new Turkey. Rising on the shoulders of Saktanber and Kandiyoti’s (2002)
seminal work on everyday life in Turkey, we aim to examine the
socio-cultural transformation that took place since, and its reflections
in everyday life. Given the social, cultural, and political changes
that have characterized and morphed the global and regional landscape
since 1990, we examine contemporary life in Turkey through consumption
and cultural studies (fashion, celebrities, etc), communications
(newsmaking, etc), sociology, anthropology, gender studies, arts and
creative industries studies (film and tv studies, museum studies, etc.),
urban studies, and digital lives. Chapters may respond to, but are not
limited by, the following prompts:
*
Arts & popular culture (fashion, film, TV series & programs,
literature, celebrities, museums, galleries, literature)
*
Consumption
*
Urban life (streets/spaces, shopping malls, gentrification)
*
Gender (inequality, masculinities, femininities, LGBT-Q, education)
*
Sports
*
Religion
*
Digital Identities
*
Food
*
Leisure
Please send your chapters, queries, and questions to
(newcultureturkey /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(newcultureturkey /at/ gmail.com)>. The
deadline for chapter submissions is 1 September 2017.
Dr. Daghan Irak
Dr. Suncem Kocer
Dr. Cagri Yalkin
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