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Conference venue: Hamburg, Germany
Period: June 26-28, 2014
The Turkish Studies Department at University Hamburg with the financial support of Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) will host an international multidisciplinary conference on social change and political radicalization in Turkey in the 1960s.
As in other countries around the globe, Turkey in the “long sixties” experienced substantial social changes, mass mobilization, and multifaceted forms of popular protest. During this period the country faced serious crisis of legitimacy, representation and government in the realm of politics and economics. Rapid urbanization and the migration flow from rural areas to the industrial cities starting in the 1950s changed the structure of society seriously, and the political sphere, too. The state and its weak social welfare system were not able to cope with unemployment and widespread poverty; hardship was most blatant in the gecekondus, in the shanty towns of the urban areas put up by poor migrants from the villages. Governments in the 1960s and opposition parties like the CHP (Republican People Party) were apparently unable to respond to the growing discontent and deprivation among substantial parts of the population.
The cultural polarization between laicism (laiklik) and Islam inherited from the early Kemalist republican regime became even more evident in the 1960s. In addition, already existing or new conflict lines emerged along ideological (left vs. right), ethnical (Turkish vs. Kurdish), confessional (Sunni vs. Alevi), and economic (etatism vs. free market economy) lines. The lack of trust in democratic institutions made more and more people join the cadres of the militant extra-parliamentary opposition. Violent clashes between left-wing and right-wing militants and of both with the police increased. Students’ riots, strikes, boycotts and occupation of public institutions occurred in 1966 and 1967. From 1968 to 1971 the public protest as well as the violent clashes became bloodier, wider in scope, and more frequent. In particular the ideological and religious divisions of society helped to create groups placing themselves in an antagonistic relationship towards the state and each other. Ultimately, this chain of events turned out to be the decisive factor in the second breakdown of democratization in March 1971 when the military forces ousted the ruling party from office and proclaimed martial law to “restore law and order”. The 1961 Constitution which guaranteed political pluralism and freedom of opinion had been retracted after only ten years of implementation. The clampdown after the demi coup d’état in 1971 weakened decisively the development of the civil society. Instead, fanaticism, uniformity, and militarisation of social groups prevailed which reinforced the evolving culture of violence in Turkish society. The undeclared civil war in the 1970s took thousands of lives. The roots of these events can be traced back to the social and politico-economic upheavals in the 1960s. The conference will explore the relationship between fundamental processes of social change and political radicalization in the 1960s, a period of increasing violence and tensions in Turkish society which led to almost a civil war in the 1970s. Political analysts, both Turkish and others, have published an impressive body of literature on this central chapter of Turkish history in 20th century. Apart from some good exceptions, they mainly focussed on political formations, party politics, and the military interventions. In contrast, the social, societal and historical changes in Turkey during the 1960s have been less thoroughly investigated.
The conference ought to analyse conditions, causes and consequences of pluralisation of ideas and social movements during the period indicated. The results of these changes may be summarized as a cultural, political and ideological polarization and fragmentation of the Turkish society. The conference seeks to discuss and analyse these developments in Turkish society along ideological, ethnical, cultural, and religious divisions, which have effects on Turkish politics and society until today.
On the other hand, we want to bring together scholars of various disciplines with an interest in contemporary Turkish history and foster the international scholarly exchange among them, in particular since “Turkish contemporary history” as a discipline is at present far from common discourse about problems and methods.
Thursday, 26 June 2014
18:00-19:30 Keynote Çağlar Keyder: Social Change and Political Radicalization in Tur-key after Kemalism
19:30 Reception
Friday, 27 June 2014
9:00 Opening
Welcoming adresses (Director of the Turkish Studies Department Prof. Yavuz Köse) and introduction (Berna Pekesen)
Session I: Sources of radicalization
9:30-10:00 Oğuz Topak (Ankara): Why Poverty in the 1960s led to radicalization
10:00-10:30 Jenny B. White (Stockholm): Turkey in the 1970s: Cultural narratives
Coffee break
10:45-11:15 Nadir Özbek (Istanbul): Capitalism unleashed? Social policy and hate of the rich in the 1960s
11:15-11:45 Elise Massicard (Paris/Istanbul): Alevis in the 1960s: From mobility to mobilization
11:45-12:00 Commentator: Raoul Motika (Istanbul), followed by the general discussion
13:00-14:30 Lunch
Session II. Rationale and characteristics of violence
14:30-15:00 Hamit Bozarslan (Paris): Political fight and martyrdom. The legitimacy of violence among radical left
15:00-15:30 Tanıl Bora (Ankara): Violent “idealists”: the iconography of self and enemies among radical right
15:30-16:00 Aysen Uysal (Izmir): States response: juridical coercion and physical force in the 1960s
Coffee break
16:15-16:45 Fatmagül Berktay (Istanbul): Gendering violence? Women activism and the left
16:45-17:15 Commentator: Kerem Öktem (London) followed by the general discussion
19:00 Joint dinner
Saturday, 28 June 2014
Session III: Radicalization of social groups
9:00-9:30 Mehmet Ertan (Istanbul): Alevis and the radical left
9:30-10:00 Heiko Schuss (Erlangen): Economic policy, interest groups and their enemies
10:00-10:30 Brian Mello (Allentown, PA): Radicalization and/or reformism in working class politics
Coffee break
10:45-11:15 Berna Pekesen (Hamburg): Radical students and their allies
11:15-11:30 Commentator: Udo Steinbach (Hamburg) followed by the general discussion
12:30-13:30 Lunch
Session IV: Symbols and rituals of radicalization
13:30-14:00 Bülent Batuman (Istanbul): Objects of Hate? Architectural symbols of the rich
14:00-14:30 Tahire Erman (Ankara): Liberated neighbourhoods in the urban periphery
14:30-15:00 Christoph Ramm (Bern): Protest music and enemy images
Coffee break
15:15-15:45 Yavuz Köse (Hamburg): Anti-consumerism and Anti-Americanism in action
15:45-16:00 Commentator: Klaus Kreiser (Berlin) followed by the final discussion
17:00 End of the conference
Berna Pekesen
Universität Hamburg, Asien-Afrika-Istitut/Turkologie: Edmund Siemers- Allee 1 (Flügel Ost)
e-mail: berna.pekesen@uni-hamburg.de