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Deals with three themes, 'Structures', 'Spaces' and 'Voices', providing an intellectual and epistemological arc. This text is suitable for scholars within, for example, Middle and Near Eastern Studies, Media Studies, Sociology who wish to gain a deeper understanding of the relationship between media, politics and culture in this complex country.
List of contents
1. Re-contextualizing Turkey: Beyond the East-West Divide
Christian Christensen (Karlstad University, Sweden) & Miyase Christensen (Karlstad University, Sweden)
Section I: Structures
2. Articulating Identity and Citizenship in Turkey
E. Fuat Keyman (Koc University, Turkey)
3. The Development of Commercial Broadcasting in Turkey
Cem Pekman (Marmara University, Turkey)
4. The Passing of Traditional Hegemony and the Rise of Islamic Media: Structural and Ideological Change in the Turkish Media Since 1990
Haluk Sahin (Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey)
5. Shifting Cultural Policy Discourse in Turkey Today
Asu Aksoy (Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey)
6. Between Laughter, Tears and Nationalism: The Rise of a New Popular Cinema in Turkey
Asuman Suner (Sabanci University, Turkey)
7. The State of the Information Society in Turkey: A Multi-Dimensional Approach
Kursat Cagiltay (Middle East Technical University, Turkey) & Mete Yildiz (Hacettepe University, Turkey)
8. Access Denied: Video-Sharing, the State and Censorship in Turkey
Christian Christensen (Karlstad University, Sweden)
Section II: Spaces
9. Europe and Turkey: Why Such a Bad Relationship? And What New possibilities?
Kevin Robins (City University-London, UK)
10. Between Silence and Recognition: Popular Constructions of ‘East’ and ‘Eastern People’ in Contemporary Turkey
Ayse Öncü (Sabanci University, Turkey)
11. A Showcase for the Global City: The Neighborhood of Tesvikiye in Istanbul
Leyla Neyzi (Sabanci University, Turkey)
12. Media Used and Created in the Diaspora: From the Time of the European Recruitment of Turkish Workers Until Today
Christine L. Ogan (Indiana University, USA)
13. Mapping the City on a Billboard: Visual Marketing of Istanbul for a Contemporary Agenda
Özlem Unsal (City University-London, UK)
Section III: Voices
14. The Irresistible Rise of the Spectacle: Hegemony and Resistance in Turkish Media
Mahmut Mutman (Bilkent University, Turkey)
15. Culture and Women’s Voices
Nuket Kardam (Monterey Institute of International Studies, USA)
16. The Subjugating Power of the Media and the Public Gaze: Secularism and the Islamic Headscarf
Alev Cinar (Bilkent University, Turkey)
17. The Melancholic Cosmopolitanism of Muslum Gurses
Martin Stokes (Oxford University, UK)
18. Interrupted Voices in Turkey’s Contentious Public Sphere
Miyase Christensen (Karlstad University, Sweden)
19. Love (and Hate) Thy Neighbour: The Construction of Kurdishness in Turkish TV Serials
About the author
Christian Christensen is Associate Professor in the Department of Informatics and Media at Uppsala University in Sweden. He is the author of numerous book chapters and peer-reviewed articles on media and communication in Turkey, journalism, media, new technology and conflict. His research has been published in journals such as Media, War & Conflict, The Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics, Global Media & Communication, The British Journalism Review and Popular Communication: The International Journal of Media and Culture.
Miyase Christensen is Associate Professor in the Department of Media and Communication Studies at Karlstad University in Sweden. In addition to the books mentioned below, Christensen has published numerous international articles and book chapters and her research areas include: globalisation processes and the political economy of media; media and information society policies (with an emphasis on the EU and Turkey); media, identity, citizenship and politics. Her current projects include and international collaborative work on new media communities, transnationalization and citizenship.
Summary
Deals with three themes, 'Structures', 'Spaces' and 'Voices', providing an intellectual and epistemological arc. This text is suitable for scholars within, for example, Middle and Near Eastern Studies, Media Studies, Sociology who wish to gain a deeper understanding of the relationship between media, politics and culture in this complex country.