Ebook
This book provides a critical discussion on how different discourses of nationalism in the Turkish media construct contested concepts of New Turkey's identity, which has great importance for mapping modern Turkey's place in the world of nations.
Drawing on a Discourse-Historical Approach, the author analyses different discourses on Turkish national identity and foreign policy in Turkish media in the second term of the AKP government from 2007 to 2011, which was the period of consolidation of Muslim conservative nationalism in both internal and external relations.
By using three case studies, including the Presidential elections in 2007, the launch of Kurdish Initiative in 2009, and the debate of axis shift in Western orientation of Turkish Foreign Policy in 2010, the book argues that not only has AKP's Muslim nationalism reconstructed new Turkish foreign policy, but also new Turkish foreign policy discourse has reconstructed Turkish nation's Muslim identity and reinforced Muslim nationalism.
Analyzes the process of the emergence of New Turkey's identity
Uses a Discourse Historical Approach to reveal competing discourses of Turkish nationalism and empirically shows the clash of different narratives of the Turkish nation-state within a complex interdependence between religion, ethnicity and foreign policy.
Sheds lights on the emergence of Turkey's new identity by analyzing three main challenges of Kemalist nation-state identity: AKP's pro-Islamist discourse, Kurdish discourse, and foreign policy discourse.
Reveals Turkish national identity and foreign policy discourses as reproductive and constitutive of each other.
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 History: Religion, Turkish nationalism and foreign policy
2 Theory and methodology: Critical discourse analysis
3 Discourse analysis: Imagining the New Turkey
4 Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
In an era of political populism and authoritarianism, few countries provide more interest than Turkey. This authoritative book identifies the periods in recent political history that have shifted the national identity discourse of Turkey in the direction that glorifies a historical past while broadening its appeal to the Sunni Muslim world.
Filiz Coban Oran is Associate Professor of International Relations at Canakkale Onsekiz Mart University, Turkey. Her research interests focus on nationalism, identity politics and foreign policy analysis in International Relations. She is the editor of Religion and Transformation of International Relations in the 21st Century (2017).