Social Theory and Later Modernities: The Turkish Experience
Social Theory and Later Modernities: The Turkish Experience
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Abstract
The debate on varieties of modernity is central to current social theory and research, and this book explores the theme in relation to the culture and society of Turkey. It focuses on the Kemalist project to create a modern Turkish nation-state, analysing its historical background, the role of the concepts of ethnicity and nation, and the configurations of state, society and economy in the new Turkish republic. The author then moves on to examine the relations between Islam and modernity, arguing that both must be understood as open to multiple interpretations rather than seen as monolithic and as diametrically opposed. He considers the rise of Islamism in Turkey and looks in particular at the paradoxical role of women activists within the Islamist movement, ultimately arguing that Islamism must be understood as a modern movement, albeit a paradoxical one, rather than simply as a return to ‘tradition’.
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Front Matter
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Introduction The Theme of Varieties of Modernity
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1
Modernity as a Field of Tensions
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2
Social Theory and Later Modernities
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3
Ethnicity, Nation and Civilization
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4
State, Society and Economy: Tensions between Liberty and Discipline
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5
Islam and Modernity: Radical Openness to Interpretation
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6
Kemalism and Islamism on the ‘Female Question’
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7
A Theory of Modernity in the Light of the Turkish Experience
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End Matter
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