Menu Expand
Why Turkey is Authoritarian

Why Turkey is Authoritarian

Halil Karaveli

(2018)

Additional Information

Book Details

Abstract

For the last century, the Western world has regarded Turkey as a pivotal case of the 'clash of civilisations' between Islam and the West. Why Turkey is Authoritarian offers a radical challenge to this conventional narrative. Halil Karaveli highlights the danger in viewing events in Turkey as a war between a 'westernising' state and the popular masses defending their culture and religion, arguing instead for a class analysis that is largely ignored in the Turkish context.

This book goes beyond cultural categories that overshadow more complex realities when thinking about the 'Muslim world', while highlighting the ways in which these cultural prejudices have informed ideological positions. Karaveli argues that Turkey's culture and identity have disabled the Left, which has largely been unable to transcend these divisions.

This book asks the crucial question: why does democracy continue to elude Turkey? Ultimately, Karaveli argues that Turkish history is instructive for a left that faces the global challenge of a rising populist right, which succeeds in mobilising culture and identity to its own purposes.

Published in partnership with the Left Book Club.
'Informative and authoritative Karaveli's analysis of Turkish politics should be required reading for anyone who wants to understand Turkey's relentless retreat from democracy'
Ronald Grigor Suny, William H. Sewell Jr. Distinguished University Professor of History, The University of Michigan, and author of 'They Can Live in the Desert But Nowhere Else': A History of the Armenian Genocide (Princeton, 2015)
'Wrests us out of the stale narratives of Islam vs. secularism, offering a new way of understanding one of the most important questions in Turkey today: why despite so much democratic promise, its fundamental political structure returns to authoritarianism again and again'
Suzy Hansen, author of Notes on a Foreign Country (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2017)

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Cover Cover
Contents vii
Series Preface ix
Timeline xi
List of Illustrations xv
Introduction 1
1. A Pattern of Violence 9
2. Kemalism and the Left 35
3. Capitalist Foundation 70
4. How the Right Won the People 105
5. Social Democratic Hope 129
6. Vengeance of the Right 162
7. The Rise of the Islamists 188
Epilogue: Class, Identity and Democracy 209
Afterword: Attacking the Kurds - The 'Return' of Kemalism 213
Notes 220
Bibliography 226
Index 228