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The Passenger
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The Passenger
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The best writing and art from around the world. One country at a time. Turkey has grappled through its history with the definition of its own identity. Poised between competing ideologies, secularism and piousness, Turkey defies easy labels and categories. Through the voices of some of its best writers, many of them in exile, this volume tries to make sense of this fascinating country.
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The best writing and art from around the world. One country at a time. Turkey has grappled through its history with the definition of its own identity. Poised between competing ideologies, secularism and piousness, Turkey defies easy labels and categories. Through the voices of some of its best writers, many of them in exile, this volume tries to make sense of this fascinating country.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- The Passenger
- Verlag: Europa Editions / Iperborea
- Seitenzahl: 192
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Januar 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 238mm x 162mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 512g
- ISBN-13: 9781787702424
- ISBN-10: 1787702421
- Artikelnr.: 58590967
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- The Passenger
- Verlag: Europa Editions / Iperborea
- Seitenzahl: 192
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Januar 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 238mm x 162mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 512g
- ISBN-13: 9781787702424
- ISBN-10: 1787702421
- Artikelnr.: 58590967
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Turkey in Numbers
The National Obsession: Raki and Tea - Kaleydoskop
The Icon: Bülent Ersoy - Kaleydoskop
The Big Dig - Elif Batuman
Urban planners in Istanbul have a problem: too much history - and too many
agendas: which chapter of the past should they showcase? Turkey's
pre-Islamic origins, as promoted by Atatürk, or the Ottoman glories so dear
to President Erdogan's heart?
Don't Call It Soap Opera - Fatima Bhutto
Turkish TV series like The Magnificent Century are rivalling US programmes
for international popularity and taking the Middle East, Asia and Latin
America by storm. What is the reason for their global success?
The Thirty-Year Coup - Dexter Filkins
Was an exiled Islamic preacher behind the attempted military coup of 2016?
Dexter Filkins probes the secrets and mysteries of the Gülen movement and
its clash with former ally President Erdogan, following decades spent
infiltrating Turkish bureaucracy to undermine the secular state.
Business à la Turque - Alev Scott
A portrait of the Turkish economy, which is driven by an innate
entrepreneurial spirit and the great dream of instant wealth but
perennially forced to deal with political instability.
Eros and Thanatos at the Restaurant - Sema Kaygasuz
Although the Turkish feminist movement is more than a century old, women
still find themselves trapped between two opposing but equally suffocating
ideologies - one secular and one religious. Only recently have they begun
to make their voices heard within a patriarchal system dominated by men who
'love them to death' but have no hesitation in killing them to keep them
quiet.
A Story of Dust and Light - Burhan Sönmez
Every summer the writer Burhan Sönmez returns to the Anatolian village in
which he was born - but the only remnant of that unspoiled rural world,
with its traditions and apolitical religious faith, is the banned Kurdish
language.
Turkish Nationalism and Its Historical Roots - Gerhard Schweizer
From the ruins of the Ottoman Empire - where Turks, Kurds, Armenians and
Greeks lived together in peace for centuries in a multi-ethnic state in
which language played no role in politics or identity - a new nationalism
grew up that would separate the different peoples and impose an enforced
Turkification, the principal victims of which were the Armenians.
No Fairy-Tale Ending: Hasankeyf and the Ilisu Dam - Ercan y Yilmaz
In the heart of the Mesopotamian basin, the cradle of the world's most
ancient civilisations, the city of Hasankeyf should have been an prime
candidate for UNESCO's World Heritage List - but rather than being flooded
by tourists it has been drowned following the damming of the River Tigris.
'I Can't Stay Silent': Turkish Rap - Begüm Kovulmaz
Turkish rap first emerged in Kreuzberg, Berlin, and reached Istanbul in the
1990s, where it remained a niche genre for many years. When it exploded
into the mainstream in the late 2010s the time was ripe for it to become
the Gezi generation's main forum for protest and the reclamation of their
physical and cultural spaces.
The Pen(cil) Is Mightier ... - Valentina Marcella
Satire is one of the few remaining channels for criticising the government
in Turkey. Undeterred, amid protest and censorship, cartoonists are
continuing their fight against attempts to squash the right to freedom of
expression.
Ultras United: How the Gezi Park Protests Brought the Fans Together -
Stephen Wood
The 2013 protest movement was so widespread that it even achieved the
miracle of bridging the chasms between football's big three in Istanbul -
Galatasaray, Fenerbahçe and Besiktas - some of the most deeply felt
rivalries in world football.
A Sign of the Times - Kaleydoskop
An Author Recommends - Elif Shafak
The Playlist - Açik Radyo and Kaleydoskop
Further Reading
The National Obsession: Raki and Tea - Kaleydoskop
The Icon: Bülent Ersoy - Kaleydoskop
The Big Dig - Elif Batuman
Urban planners in Istanbul have a problem: too much history - and too many
agendas: which chapter of the past should they showcase? Turkey's
pre-Islamic origins, as promoted by Atatürk, or the Ottoman glories so dear
to President Erdogan's heart?
Don't Call It Soap Opera - Fatima Bhutto
Turkish TV series like The Magnificent Century are rivalling US programmes
for international popularity and taking the Middle East, Asia and Latin
America by storm. What is the reason for their global success?
The Thirty-Year Coup - Dexter Filkins
Was an exiled Islamic preacher behind the attempted military coup of 2016?
Dexter Filkins probes the secrets and mysteries of the Gülen movement and
its clash with former ally President Erdogan, following decades spent
infiltrating Turkish bureaucracy to undermine the secular state.
Business à la Turque - Alev Scott
A portrait of the Turkish economy, which is driven by an innate
entrepreneurial spirit and the great dream of instant wealth but
perennially forced to deal with political instability.
Eros and Thanatos at the Restaurant - Sema Kaygasuz
Although the Turkish feminist movement is more than a century old, women
still find themselves trapped between two opposing but equally suffocating
ideologies - one secular and one religious. Only recently have they begun
to make their voices heard within a patriarchal system dominated by men who
'love them to death' but have no hesitation in killing them to keep them
quiet.
A Story of Dust and Light - Burhan Sönmez
Every summer the writer Burhan Sönmez returns to the Anatolian village in
which he was born - but the only remnant of that unspoiled rural world,
with its traditions and apolitical religious faith, is the banned Kurdish
language.
Turkish Nationalism and Its Historical Roots - Gerhard Schweizer
From the ruins of the Ottoman Empire - where Turks, Kurds, Armenians and
Greeks lived together in peace for centuries in a multi-ethnic state in
which language played no role in politics or identity - a new nationalism
grew up that would separate the different peoples and impose an enforced
Turkification, the principal victims of which were the Armenians.
No Fairy-Tale Ending: Hasankeyf and the Ilisu Dam - Ercan y Yilmaz
In the heart of the Mesopotamian basin, the cradle of the world's most
ancient civilisations, the city of Hasankeyf should have been an prime
candidate for UNESCO's World Heritage List - but rather than being flooded
by tourists it has been drowned following the damming of the River Tigris.
'I Can't Stay Silent': Turkish Rap - Begüm Kovulmaz
Turkish rap first emerged in Kreuzberg, Berlin, and reached Istanbul in the
1990s, where it remained a niche genre for many years. When it exploded
into the mainstream in the late 2010s the time was ripe for it to become
the Gezi generation's main forum for protest and the reclamation of their
physical and cultural spaces.
The Pen(cil) Is Mightier ... - Valentina Marcella
Satire is one of the few remaining channels for criticising the government
in Turkey. Undeterred, amid protest and censorship, cartoonists are
continuing their fight against attempts to squash the right to freedom of
expression.
Ultras United: How the Gezi Park Protests Brought the Fans Together -
Stephen Wood
The 2013 protest movement was so widespread that it even achieved the
miracle of bridging the chasms between football's big three in Istanbul -
Galatasaray, Fenerbahçe and Besiktas - some of the most deeply felt
rivalries in world football.
A Sign of the Times - Kaleydoskop
An Author Recommends - Elif Shafak
The Playlist - Açik Radyo and Kaleydoskop
Further Reading
Turkey in Numbers
The National Obsession: Raki and Tea - Kaleydoskop
The Icon: Bülent Ersoy - Kaleydoskop
The Big Dig - Elif Batuman
Urban planners in Istanbul have a problem: too much history - and too many
agendas: which chapter of the past should they showcase? Turkey's
pre-Islamic origins, as promoted by Atatürk, or the Ottoman glories so dear
to President Erdogan's heart?
Don't Call It Soap Opera - Fatima Bhutto
Turkish TV series like The Magnificent Century are rivalling US programmes
for international popularity and taking the Middle East, Asia and Latin
America by storm. What is the reason for their global success?
The Thirty-Year Coup - Dexter Filkins
Was an exiled Islamic preacher behind the attempted military coup of 2016?
Dexter Filkins probes the secrets and mysteries of the Gülen movement and
its clash with former ally President Erdogan, following decades spent
infiltrating Turkish bureaucracy to undermine the secular state.
Business à la Turque - Alev Scott
A portrait of the Turkish economy, which is driven by an innate
entrepreneurial spirit and the great dream of instant wealth but
perennially forced to deal with political instability.
Eros and Thanatos at the Restaurant - Sema Kaygasuz
Although the Turkish feminist movement is more than a century old, women
still find themselves trapped between two opposing but equally suffocating
ideologies - one secular and one religious. Only recently have they begun
to make their voices heard within a patriarchal system dominated by men who
'love them to death' but have no hesitation in killing them to keep them
quiet.
A Story of Dust and Light - Burhan Sönmez
Every summer the writer Burhan Sönmez returns to the Anatolian village in
which he was born - but the only remnant of that unspoiled rural world,
with its traditions and apolitical religious faith, is the banned Kurdish
language.
Turkish Nationalism and Its Historical Roots - Gerhard Schweizer
From the ruins of the Ottoman Empire - where Turks, Kurds, Armenians and
Greeks lived together in peace for centuries in a multi-ethnic state in
which language played no role in politics or identity - a new nationalism
grew up that would separate the different peoples and impose an enforced
Turkification, the principal victims of which were the Armenians.
No Fairy-Tale Ending: Hasankeyf and the Ilisu Dam - Ercan y Yilmaz
In the heart of the Mesopotamian basin, the cradle of the world's most
ancient civilisations, the city of Hasankeyf should have been an prime
candidate for UNESCO's World Heritage List - but rather than being flooded
by tourists it has been drowned following the damming of the River Tigris.
'I Can't Stay Silent': Turkish Rap - Begüm Kovulmaz
Turkish rap first emerged in Kreuzberg, Berlin, and reached Istanbul in the
1990s, where it remained a niche genre for many years. When it exploded
into the mainstream in the late 2010s the time was ripe for it to become
the Gezi generation's main forum for protest and the reclamation of their
physical and cultural spaces.
The Pen(cil) Is Mightier ... - Valentina Marcella
Satire is one of the few remaining channels for criticising the government
in Turkey. Undeterred, amid protest and censorship, cartoonists are
continuing their fight against attempts to squash the right to freedom of
expression.
Ultras United: How the Gezi Park Protests Brought the Fans Together -
Stephen Wood
The 2013 protest movement was so widespread that it even achieved the
miracle of bridging the chasms between football's big three in Istanbul -
Galatasaray, Fenerbahçe and Besiktas - some of the most deeply felt
rivalries in world football.
A Sign of the Times - Kaleydoskop
An Author Recommends - Elif Shafak
The Playlist - Açik Radyo and Kaleydoskop
Further Reading
The National Obsession: Raki and Tea - Kaleydoskop
The Icon: Bülent Ersoy - Kaleydoskop
The Big Dig - Elif Batuman
Urban planners in Istanbul have a problem: too much history - and too many
agendas: which chapter of the past should they showcase? Turkey's
pre-Islamic origins, as promoted by Atatürk, or the Ottoman glories so dear
to President Erdogan's heart?
Don't Call It Soap Opera - Fatima Bhutto
Turkish TV series like The Magnificent Century are rivalling US programmes
for international popularity and taking the Middle East, Asia and Latin
America by storm. What is the reason for their global success?
The Thirty-Year Coup - Dexter Filkins
Was an exiled Islamic preacher behind the attempted military coup of 2016?
Dexter Filkins probes the secrets and mysteries of the Gülen movement and
its clash with former ally President Erdogan, following decades spent
infiltrating Turkish bureaucracy to undermine the secular state.
Business à la Turque - Alev Scott
A portrait of the Turkish economy, which is driven by an innate
entrepreneurial spirit and the great dream of instant wealth but
perennially forced to deal with political instability.
Eros and Thanatos at the Restaurant - Sema Kaygasuz
Although the Turkish feminist movement is more than a century old, women
still find themselves trapped between two opposing but equally suffocating
ideologies - one secular and one religious. Only recently have they begun
to make their voices heard within a patriarchal system dominated by men who
'love them to death' but have no hesitation in killing them to keep them
quiet.
A Story of Dust and Light - Burhan Sönmez
Every summer the writer Burhan Sönmez returns to the Anatolian village in
which he was born - but the only remnant of that unspoiled rural world,
with its traditions and apolitical religious faith, is the banned Kurdish
language.
Turkish Nationalism and Its Historical Roots - Gerhard Schweizer
From the ruins of the Ottoman Empire - where Turks, Kurds, Armenians and
Greeks lived together in peace for centuries in a multi-ethnic state in
which language played no role in politics or identity - a new nationalism
grew up that would separate the different peoples and impose an enforced
Turkification, the principal victims of which were the Armenians.
No Fairy-Tale Ending: Hasankeyf and the Ilisu Dam - Ercan y Yilmaz
In the heart of the Mesopotamian basin, the cradle of the world's most
ancient civilisations, the city of Hasankeyf should have been an prime
candidate for UNESCO's World Heritage List - but rather than being flooded
by tourists it has been drowned following the damming of the River Tigris.
'I Can't Stay Silent': Turkish Rap - Begüm Kovulmaz
Turkish rap first emerged in Kreuzberg, Berlin, and reached Istanbul in the
1990s, where it remained a niche genre for many years. When it exploded
into the mainstream in the late 2010s the time was ripe for it to become
the Gezi generation's main forum for protest and the reclamation of their
physical and cultural spaces.
The Pen(cil) Is Mightier ... - Valentina Marcella
Satire is one of the few remaining channels for criticising the government
in Turkey. Undeterred, amid protest and censorship, cartoonists are
continuing their fight against attempts to squash the right to freedom of
expression.
Ultras United: How the Gezi Park Protests Brought the Fans Together -
Stephen Wood
The 2013 protest movement was so widespread that it even achieved the
miracle of bridging the chasms between football's big three in Istanbul -
Galatasaray, Fenerbahçe and Besiktas - some of the most deeply felt
rivalries in world football.
A Sign of the Times - Kaleydoskop
An Author Recommends - Elif Shafak
The Playlist - Açik Radyo and Kaleydoskop
Further Reading