Abstract
There is unprecedented domestic and international interest in Turkey's political past, accompanied by a societal demand for truth and justice in addressing past human rights violations. This article poses the question: Is Turkey coming to terms with its past? Drawing upon the literature on nationalism, identity, and collective memory, I argue that the Turkish state has recently taken steps to acknowledge and redress some of the past human rights violations. However, these limited and strategic acts of acknowledgment fall short of initiating a more comprehensive process of addressing past wrongs. The emergence of the Justice and Development Party as a dominant political force brings along the possibility that the discarded Kemalist memory framework will be replaced by what I callmajoritarian conservatism, a new government-sanctioned shared memory that promotes uncritical and conservative-nationalist interpretations of the past that have popular appeal, while enforcing silence on critical historiographies that challenge this hegemonic memory and identity project. Nonetheless, majoritarian conservatism will probably fail to assert state control over memory and history, even under a dominant government, as unofficial memory initiatives unsettle the hegemonic appropriation of the past.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,History,Geography, Planning and Development
Reference38 articles.
1. For analyses of Kemalist ideology, see Davison (2003) and Parla (1992).
2. Taşpınar Ömer . 2008. “Turkey's Middle East Policies: Between Neo-Ottomanism and Kemalism.” Carnegie Papers, Carnegie Middle East Center, Number 10.
3. Eissenstat Howard . 2012. “The Ghosts of Sivas: Justice Denied in Turkey.” Amnesty International Publication, 12 March.
4. Denationalization of Citizenship? The Turkish Experience1
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