Turkey Media Roundup (July 17)

[Journalists at Galatasaray Square in Istanbul on 12 July protesting censorship and police violence. Image by Adnan Onur Acar / Nar Photos.] [Journalists at Galatasaray Square in Istanbul on 12 July protesting censorship and police violence. Image by Adnan Onur Acar / Nar Photos.]

Turkey Media Roundup (July 17)

By : Turkey Page Media Roundup Editors

[This is a roundup of news articles and other materials circulating on Turkey and reflects a wide variety of opinions. It does not reflect the views of the Turkey Page Editors or of Jadaliyya. You may send your own recommendations for inclusion in each week`s roundup to turkey@jadaliyya.com by Sunday night of every week.]

English

Istanbul Protests A public and moderated collection of news articles on the protests on Crowdvoice.org.

Fifty Shades of Grey: Turkey After the Storm Oguz Işık thinks that "a new form of politics based not on polarization but on consensus building is a real possibility" in Turkey, thanks to the Gezi protests.

Egyptian Coup Shakes Turkey Semih Idiz explores Turkey’s struggle to find the right response to the military coup in Egypt.

AKP Comes Unhinged in Response to Critical Media Cengiz Çandar explores the ongoing demonization of critical Turkish and foreign media by the AKP government.

Gezi Park Has Brought Down Illusion of Turkish Democracy Cüneyt Özdemir elaborates on the flaws of Turkish democracy: “Whenever you talk about politics in Turkey it always ends up being about Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.”

Coup in Egypt Strategic Loss for Erdoğan Kadri Gürsel argues that the overthrow of Morsi by military coup in Egypt adversely affects the AKP’s regional policies.

Turkish Leadership Demoralized by Coup in Egypt Cengiz Çandar analyzes the extent to which the Turkish leadership identifies with the ousted Egyptian leadership.

Egypt Upheaval Deepens Turkey’s Regional Isolation Semih Idiz analyzes the conflict between Ankara and Riyadh in the face of the collapse of the “Sunni axis.”

Pluralism vs. Majoritarian-ism and the Future of Democracy in Turkey After Gezi Park Vernon Schubel argues that the “real conflict” in Turkey, Egypt, and other parts of the world is between those who embrace pluralism and those who prefer majoritarianism.

Testing What We Learned in Gezi Park Oğuz Alyanak reflects on the post-Gezi politics of solidarity with Lice and Diyarbakır.

Erdoğan Weakened, Turkey Polarized Ömer Zarplı argues that “an uncertain future awaits Erdoğan” in the face of both national and regional challenges.

Can Erdoğan`s Enemies Kill Him With Their Minds? Marc Champion comments on the recent appointment of conspiracy theorist extraordinaire Yiğit Bulut as chief advisor to PM Erdoğan, suggesting that “Erdoğan may have embraced a dark fantasy world.”

Gezi and Kemalo-Islamist Attacks on sociologist Göle (1) İhsan Yılmaz argues that both “ultra-nationalists” and the AKP present “essentialist narratives” of Gezi in addition to being hostile to experts who strive to understand what is going on.

Post-Morsi Egypt: Gulf In, Turkey Out Fehim Taştekin explores the fast-fading positive image of Turkey among Egyptian protesters after Turkey’s diplomatic efforts to reinstate the deposed president.

Quiet Before the Storm? Referring to the AKP, Cengiz Aktan concludes that “governments that rely on one single man pay a price.”

So Our Boys Overthrew the Government… Etyen Mahçupyan reflects on the “instrumental” uses of the word democracy in Turkey.

Egyptian Lessons for Turkey (1) and (2) Joost Lagendjik compares Turkey and Egypt, touching on “majoritarian approach to democracy” embraced by the AKP and Muslim Brotherhood, fear of Islamization, and lack of political alternatives.

Turkish Concerns Over Egyptian Coup`s Spillover Effect Lale Kemal argues that Ankara can only avoid a possible “spillover effect” from the Egyptian coup if the AKP government chooses to “focus on strengthening its institutions, broaden civil liberties, and resume its half-finished military reforms.”

Who Owns the Earth? Noam Chomsky says that “The defenders of Taksim Square are at the forefront of a worldwide struggle to preserve the global commons.”

Gezi Revolt: Critique, Courage Ali Rıza Taşkale “follows up on the continued import of the revolts in Turkey, specifically exploring how the revolts upend linear conceptions of temporality.”

Distortions and Divisions Jenna Krajeski asks whether “distrust and distortion” in the distance between Turks and Kurds can be overcome.

Turkish

Y Kuşağı mı yeni hayatın yeni insanları mı? Bekir Ağırdır contends that “Y Generation” analyses are insufficient. For him, the Gezi uprising should be evaluated in terms of “new life” and “new blood.”

2013 Gezi kuşağına hitap ediyor olmak Ömer Madra addresses the “Gezi generation” at Boğaziçi University’s graduation ceremony. The video of the speech is also available.

Öteki "Y Kuşağı" anlatıyor The other “Y Generation” is reciting: neither Gezi Park nor Kazlıçeşme—Kazlıçeşme is the place where AKP usually holds its meetings in İstanbul.

Umuda İhtiyacı Olan Müslümanın Gezi Rehberi… Mehmet Efe writes on the guidance of Gezi for Muslims who need hope. According to him, “Islamism agonizes.” His slogan is: “Long live Islam!”  

Siyasal İslamın Sonbaharı - I Ergin Yıldızoğlu asserts that the faith in “Moderate İslam” has been shaken irreversibly after the events in Turkey and Egypt. According to him, this is “the fall of political Islam.”

Hangimizin Y kuşağı? Medaim Yanık claims that the Gezi uprising is not a complete movement of the “Y Generation.” For him, the protests started as such but in time were captured by “aged leftists.”

Siyaset ve kültürel çatışma To prevent social unrest triggered by policies based upon cultural conflicts, Şükrü Hanioğlu argues that differences should be guaranteed via democratization.

Gezi Parkı ile ilgili gerçekler BDP Istanbul Deputy Sırrı Süreyya Önder, one of the symbols of the Gezi uprising, explains the facts about Gezi Park, showing his tear gas canister wound to the deputies of the AKP in the General Assembly.

Gezi’deki Patlamanın Kökenleri(2) Mücahit Bilici continues to explore "the roots of the Gezi explosion." The second part of his exploration is about the relationship between the AKP and the Gülen Community.

Ergin de pala olayına kızdı Deniz Zeyrek focus on the same issue as Mücahit Bilici—conventions and conflicts between the AKP and the Gülen Community.

Laik kesim sekülerleşirken Murat Aksoy argues that the significant achievement of the Gezi protests is “the secularization of seculars.” By secularization, he means politicization.

Gezi ulusalcı bir kalkışma mı? Umut Özkırımlı asks whether we are aware of the meaning of the pro-Kurdish protests of “white Turks,” supposing all who shout “Resist Lice” in İstanbul are nationalist.

Hayatı bir Kürtle paylaşmak Esma Bayar tells of her experience in the Gezi uprising, where she shared her life with Kurds. She writes about that experience in order to “reunite people and make peace.”

Gezi’yi tepeleyen demokratlar Ohannes Kılıçdağı criticizes the “democrats” who reduce the Gezi uprising to a reactionist movement aiming at the overthrow of an elected government.

Vesayetçiler ile sandıkçılar arasında Şahin Alpay argues that Turkey is squeezed between guardians (vesayetçi) and balloters (sandıkçılar).

Darbe karşıtlığı demokratlık için yeterli midir? Oya Baydar reveals the fact that an attitude against the coup does not intrinsically imply an attitude towards democracy.

Besmele’den Twitter’a Propaganda: İktidar ve İkna Ahmet Ataş investigates the relationship between basmala and twitter as “propaganda,” reminding us of its etymological and cognitive history.

Gasp edilen medya mı, hayatlarımız mı? Nurçay Türkoğlu writes on the social media. According to her, “struggle is inevitable and all around where power relations are at work.”

Hayali Twitter Cemaatleri Mensur Akgün argues against the Gezi uprising, calling it an “imagined twitter community.” Akgün refers to Benedict Anderson’s theory of nationalism in his argument.

Gezi sosyolojisi: Bir gençlik ve hayat tarzı güzellemesi Nazife Şişman speaks out against the dominant sociological analyses of the Gezi uprising and claims that they are just “panegyrics.”

#gezidirenişi Express Magazine prepared a special edition about the Gezi Uprising.

#yaşarken yazılan tarih The last edition of NTV Tarih, a popular history magazine that was shut down after covering the Gezi uprising, is published online. An interview with its editor is also available. 

Published on Jadaliyya

Brand Turkey and the Gezi Protests: Authoritarianism, Law, and Neoliberalism (Part One)

Brand Turkey and the Gezi Protests: Authoritarianism, Law, and Neoliberalism (Part Two)

Occupy Gezi: Die Grenzen des neoliberalen Erfolgs der Türkei

Occupy Gezi as Politics of the Body

The Visual Emergence of the Occupy Gezi Movement, Part Three: Democracy`s Workshop

The Visual Emergence of the Occupy Gezi Movement, Part Two: Every Day I’m Capulling

The Visual Emergence of the Occupy Gezi Movement, Part One: Oh Biber!

Praise for the "Marginal Groups"

Turkey: Decriminalize Dissent

The New Kurdish Movie

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Summer Readings from NEWTON

The New Texts Out Now (NEWTON) page has greatly expanded over the past year, in large part thanks to the recommendations and contributions from many of Jadaliyya’s readers. We would like to provide you with ample summer reading material by reminding you of several new texts that we have featured in recent months. This compilation of works spans a wide range of topics and disciplines by prominent authors in the field of Middle East studies.

We hope this list will be pedagogically useful for readers preparing syllabi for the fall semester, as well as those hoping to learn about new and unique perspectives on the region. To stay up to date with ongoing discussions by scholars and instructors in the field, check out Jadaliyya’s sister organization, Tadween Publishing.

Highlights

NEWTON in Focus: Thinking Through Gender and Sex

NEWTON in Focus: Egypt

NEWTON Author Nergis Ertürk Receives MLA First Book Prize

NEWTON 2012 in Review

This Year’s NEWTONs

New Texts Out Now: Mark Fathi Massoud, Law`s Fragile State: Colonial, Authoritarian, and Humanitarian Legacies in Sudan

New Texts Out Now: Ayça Çubukçu, The Responsibility to Protect: Libya and the Problem of Transnational Solidarity

New Texts Out Now: Louise Cainkar, Global Arab World Migrations and Diasporas

New Texts Out Now: Maya Mikdashi, What is Settler Colonialism? and Sherene Seikaly, Return to the Present

New Texts Out Now: Joel Beinin, Mixing, Separation, and Violence in Urban Spaces and the Rural Frontier in Palestine

New Texts Out Now: Wendy Pearlman, Emigration and the Resilience of Politics in Lebanon

New Texts Out Now: Simon Jackson, Diaspora Politics and Developmental Empire: The Syro-Lebanese at the League of Nations

New Texts Out Now: Charles Tripp, The Power and the People: Paths of Resistance in the Middle East

New Texts Out Now: Chouki El Hamel, Black Morocco: A History of Slavery, Race, and Islam

New Texts Out Now: Adel Iskandar and Bassam Haddad, Mediating the Arab Uprisings

New Texts Out Now: David McMurray and Amanda Ufheil-Somers, The Arab Revolts

New Texts Out Now: Esam Al-Amin, The Arab Awakening Unveiled

New Texts Out Now: Rashid Khalidi, Brokers of Deceit: How the US Has Undermined Peace in the Middle East

New Texts Out Now: Vijay Prashad, The Poorer Nations: A Possible History of the Global South

New Texts Out Now: Paul Aarts and Francesco Cavatorta, Civil Society in Syria and Iran

New Texts Out Now: Amr Adly, State Reform and Development in the Middle East: Turkey and Egypt in the Post-Liberalization Era

New Texts Out Now: Rachel Beckles Willson, Orientalism and Musical Mission: Palestine and the West

New Texts Out Now: Ilana Feldman, The Challenge of Categories: UNRWA and the Definition of a "Palestine Refugee"

New Texts Out Now: Jeannie Sowers, Environmental Politics in Egypt: Activists, Experts, and the State

New Texts Out Now: Dina Rizk Khoury, Iraq in Wartime: Soldiering, Martyrdom, and Remembrance

New Texts Out Now: Na`eem Jeenah, Pretending Democracy: Israel, An Ethnocratic State

New Texts Out Now: Sally K. Gallagher, Making Do in Damascus

New Texts Out Now: Natalya Vince, Saintly Grandmothers: Youth Reception and Reinterpretation of the National Past in Contemporary Algeria

New Texts Out Now: January 2013 Back to School Edition

New Texts Out Now: John M. Willis, Unmaking North and South: Cartographies of the Yemeni Past, 1857-1934

New Texts Out Now: Paolo Gerbaudo, Tweets and the Streets: Social Media and Contemporary Activism

New Texts Out Now: Madawi Al-Rasheed, A Most Masculine State: Gender, Politics, and Religion in Saudi Arabia

New Texts Out Now: Noga Efrati, Women in Iraq: Past Meets Present

New Texts Out Now: Nicola Pratt, The Gender Logics of Resistance to the "War on Terror"

New Texts Out Now: Lisa Hajjar, Torture: A Sociology of Violence and Human Rights

New Texts Out Now: Orit Bashkin, New Babylonians: A History of Jews in Modern Iraq

New Texts Out Now: Marwan M. Kraidy, The Revolutionary Body Politic