Imperial memories and neo-liberal genealogies in the Alevi-Bektashi transnational networks

This ethnographic research attempts to capture the discursive contradictions and strategic alliances in the recently emerging Alevi-Bektashi transnational networks between Turkey and several Southeast European countries. Tracing the networking endeavours of a major Alevi organization located in Ista...

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Main Author: Cakmakci, Eda
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/43121
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-431212018-01-05T17:26:02Z Imperial memories and neo-liberal genealogies in the Alevi-Bektashi transnational networks Cakmakci, Eda This ethnographic research attempts to capture the discursive contradictions and strategic alliances in the recently emerging Alevi-Bektashi transnational networks between Turkey and several Southeast European countries. Tracing the networking endeavours of a major Alevi organization located in Istanbul the research shows how, while lobbying for Alevi rights to faith in Turkey, a major Alevi organization becomes an advocate of Islamic pluralism in its transnational ventures. While the narrative of “love for humanity” underpins both the Alevi and Bektashi stakes on “moderate Islam” in the post-9/11 era, I seek to highlight how this narrative is incorporated by Turkish nationalism on the one hand, and how it travels in the context of Turkish “humanitarian aid” efforts in post-socialist countries on the other. In a post-socialist geography where property relations have been radically transformed in the last two decades, the rhetoric of “owning” Rumeli shrines as Turkish heritage cannot be separated from the prospective claims of their ownership as property. By following these threads, this thesis explores the re-making of Alevi genealogies in transnational processes. Arts, Faculty of Anthropology, Department of Graduate 2012-08-30T17:41:08Z 2012-08-30T17:41:08Z 2012 2012-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/43121 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description This ethnographic research attempts to capture the discursive contradictions and strategic alliances in the recently emerging Alevi-Bektashi transnational networks between Turkey and several Southeast European countries. Tracing the networking endeavours of a major Alevi organization located in Istanbul the research shows how, while lobbying for Alevi rights to faith in Turkey, a major Alevi organization becomes an advocate of Islamic pluralism in its transnational ventures. While the narrative of “love for humanity” underpins both the Alevi and Bektashi stakes on “moderate Islam” in the post-9/11 era, I seek to highlight how this narrative is incorporated by Turkish nationalism on the one hand, and how it travels in the context of Turkish “humanitarian aid” efforts in post-socialist countries on the other. In a post-socialist geography where property relations have been radically transformed in the last two decades, the rhetoric of “owning” Rumeli shrines as Turkish heritage cannot be separated from the prospective claims of their ownership as property. By following these threads, this thesis explores the re-making of Alevi genealogies in transnational processes. === Arts, Faculty of === Anthropology, Department of === Graduate
author Cakmakci, Eda
spellingShingle Cakmakci, Eda
Imperial memories and neo-liberal genealogies in the Alevi-Bektashi transnational networks
author_facet Cakmakci, Eda
author_sort Cakmakci, Eda
title Imperial memories and neo-liberal genealogies in the Alevi-Bektashi transnational networks
title_short Imperial memories and neo-liberal genealogies in the Alevi-Bektashi transnational networks
title_full Imperial memories and neo-liberal genealogies in the Alevi-Bektashi transnational networks
title_fullStr Imperial memories and neo-liberal genealogies in the Alevi-Bektashi transnational networks
title_full_unstemmed Imperial memories and neo-liberal genealogies in the Alevi-Bektashi transnational networks
title_sort imperial memories and neo-liberal genealogies in the alevi-bektashi transnational networks
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/43121
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