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Wiley InterScience

Nations and Nationalism

Nations and Nationalism

Volume 11 Issue 3, Pages 343 - 360

Published Online: 23 Jun 2005

Journal compilation © 2010 Association for the Study of Ethnicity and Nationalism



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The origins of Turkish Republican citizenship: the birth of race*
Bora Isyar **
  ** Department of Sociology, York University, Toronto, Canada

  *This article is a revised version of the last chapter of my MA Thesis titled '"Marching Toward Turkism": the Origins of Turkish Republican Citizenship'. The thesis was awarded the Thesis Prize by York University. I would like to thank my thesis supervisor Engin F. Isin and committee member Gordon Darroch for their immense contribution to the thesis; Patricia Wood and Daphne Winland for their insightful comments on the thesis; the three anonymous referees for their comments on the article and the Managing Editor Seeta Persaud.

Copyright ©ASEN 2005

Abstract.

AbstractThe Balkan Wars and the emergence of dominance of TurkismTurkism and the European  modern The Armenian tragedyCitizen-Turk and the  social body References

Abstract. This article explores the emergence of the dominance of racialised Turkish citizenship. Contrary to the conventional methods that investigate the early republican era, this paper starts by examining the final years of the Ottoman Empire with a special emphasis on the Balkan Wars as the birth of racialised technologies of citizenship. Then, I analyse the encounters between racialised thought in the Ottoman Empire in the twentieth century and its recurring counterpart in these encounters: 'European modernity'. Next, I dwell on an illustration of a materialisation of racialised citizenship in the Ottoman Empire: the displacement and elimination of Armenian citizens. Finally, by probing the dominant strand of modern citizenship and nationhood in Europe, I articulate the commonalities of racialised citizenship in Europe and the Ottoman Empire in the early twentieth century. I conclude by arguing that race as a particular identity should not be seen as an institutionalised aspect of citizenship only in ostensibly 'Oriental and absolutist regimes'. Instead, the focus should be on moments at which 'European modernity' and various nationalisms (racial, ethnic, cultural) mutually constitute each other.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1354-5078.2005.00208.x About DOI

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