Religion, Politics and Nationalism in Contemporary Turkey

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Jenny White
Boston University

Date: March 25, 2015

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Abstract

Turkey is at a crossroads. Under the Islam-rooted AK Party that has been in power for more than a decade, Turkey has been transformed in both positive and negative ways, modernizing, globalizing, and fostering entirely new ways of being Turkish and being Muslim. Since 2011, however, the country has begun to slide into a one-man autocracy beset with corruption allegations and all-out war between the Sunni AKP and its former Sunni ally, the Hizmet movement. The government has begun to dismantle democratic institutions andenormous tensions are building.

Speaker Bio

Jenny White

Jenny Whiteis a professor of anthropology and director of undergraduate studies at Boston University. Her research focuses on Turkish politics, with interests including political Islam, civil society, and ethnic identity. Her most recent book,Muslim Nationalists and The New Turks, examines how contemporary Turkish nationalism and Islam intersect to produce a new conception of Turkish national identity. She is also the author ofIslamic Mobilization in Turkey: A Study in Vernacular PoliticsԻMoney Makes Us Relatives: Women’s Labor in Urban Turkey, as well as three critically acclaimed historical novels set in nineteenth-century Istanbul. White is a former president of the Turkish Studies Association and has received numerous grants and fellowships, including from the Social Science Research Council, the MacArthur Foundation and the National Science Foundation. She earned a B.A. from the City University of New York, an M.A. from Hacettepe University (Ankara, Turkey) and a Ph.D. in Anthropology from the University of Texas at Austin.

Event Photos

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BU anthropology professor Jenny White speaking about religion, politics and nationalism in Turkey.

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Photos by MTS photography

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Further Reading

Mustafa Akyol,(New York: Norton, 2013).

Philip Dorroll, “‘,”Journal of the American Academy of Religion82:4 (December 2014): 1033-1069.

Dexter Filkins, “,”New Yorker,March 12, 2012.

Fethullah Gulen, “,”New York Times,February 3, 2015.

Suzy Hansen, “,”New Republic,November 10, 2010.

Cinar Kiper, “,”Atlantic,April 5, 2013.

Jenna Krajeski, “,”New Yorker,January 27, 2012.

Nate Lavey, “,”New Yorker,February 14, 2014.

Ahmet T. Kuru and Alfred Stepan, ed.,(New York: Columbia University Press, 2012).

Iren Ozgur,ed.,(New York: Cambridge University Press, 2012).

Philip Shishkin, “,”Wall Street Journal,March 30, 2007.

Yuskel Sezgin, “?”Washington Post,November 8, 2014.

Semiha Topal, “,”International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society25 (2012): 1-14.

Berna Turam,(Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2007).

Ufuk Ulutas, “,”Middle Eastern Studies46:3 (May 2010): 389-399.

Jenny White,(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2012).

Jenny White, “,”National Interest10:4 (March/April 2015).

Jenny White, “,”Current History113 (December 2014): 356-361.

In the News

Hundreds of Turkish soldiers recently crossed the border into Syria to protect, the grandfather of Ottoman Empire founder Osman I, from attack by the Islamic State. Turkey’s veneration of its Ottoman heritage has contributed to a growing strain of nationalism in Turkish politics, whichJenny White will discuss at the Boisi CenteronWednesday, March 25.