Arabs in Turkish Political Cartoons, 1876-1950

SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9780815637974

National Self and Non-National Other

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By Ilkim Bueke Okyar
Imprint:
SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY PRESS
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Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
344

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Description

Ilkim Bueke Okyar is associate professor in political science and International Relations at Yeditepe University.

Bueke Okyar has crafted a work that is not only enlightening but also deeply vitally pertinent to grasping the intricacies of contemporary Turkish society and its identity formation.-- "Cetin Celik, New Perspectives on Turkey" With the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire, the emergence of independent Arab states, and the establishment of the Turkish Republic, the Arab emerged as the ultimate Other against whom Turkishness was defined. The author cleverly highlights this transformation through political cartoons and shows how the cartoon press made the republican elite's nation-building project accessible to the urban masses. Recommended.-- "Choice" A magisterial work utilizing primary sources in the late Ottoman and early republican periods, Okyar has written the definitive book on the relationship between cartoons and national identity in Ottoman and Republican Turkey.-- "Umut Uzer, author of An Intellectual History of Turkish Nationalism" Okyar makes an important contribution to more standard explanations of othering under the influence of Orientalism and modern nationalism. . . This book will resonate with the renewed attention to race in the broader scholarship and interrogations of racism in non-western societies.-- "Hasan Kayali, author of Arabs and Young Turks: Ottomanism, Arabism, and Islamism in the Second Constitutional Period of the Ottoman Empire, 1908-1918" An original book using Turkish political cartoons in the Ottoman Turkish press, and a variety of other sources, to show how the Arabs were portrayed.-- "Feroz Ahmad, author of The Making of Modern Turkey"

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