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2019, Duvar English
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Long gone is the iconic figure of the Islamist intellectual who used to occupy the front row of every public debate and speak in the name of the oppressed. The relatively sudden disappearance of Islamist intellectuals from the public scene in Turkey is a story not of silent withdrawal, but of a spectacular fall. What led to their extinction is their brush with power.
After the military coup of 12 September 1980, the field of intellectual production in Turkey has gone through a structural transformation with the strategies conducted by state policies. The most prominent " intellectual breakthrough " in the process of transformation was executed by the Islamist intellectuals. This enterprise, which is also known as " the new Muslim Intellectual movement " in the literature, led Muslim section who for many years has had an ambivalent relationship with the political field to " discover politics ". Until the 80s and the middle of the 90s, the new Muslim intellectuals had constructed an opposing intellectual discourse which had been established on the disagreement between modernity and the Islamic. For Muslim sections, the dominant figures of this innovative discourse were leading Muslim intellectuals like İsmet Özel, Rasim Özdenören and Ali Bulaç. However, the AK Party's coming to power in the 2000s with an Islamic ideological background, especially successful mobilization of the Islamic movements in harmony with capital have caused erosions in arguments which the new Muslim intellectual had once supported. In this context, the main argument in this paper is that, in contrast to the authoritarian identity of the official ideology, Islamic intellectuals, who have entered into a relative alliance with different ideological positions under the title of " democratic republic " , have become the discourse producers of liberal positions. Another factor within this position shift is the economic-political process which is nowadays called the " Protestantization of Islam " .
Critique: Critical Middle Eastern Studies, 2005
1990s “Islamists’ mobilization of truth” (Bayat, 2007, p. 54) clashed with the strategies of political campaigns, which imposed a widening of the base and a response to different social demands. Some Islamist intellectuals had already broadened the meaning of Islamism yet Erdoğan’s successful electoral tactics caused scandal in his party because was attempting to reach new voters. At the same time, during his mayorship, to may respond to social demands he improved the basic services as well as opened public parks, shopping malls, and meeting points transforming urban public spaces against the Islamist understanding of spatiality. After 2002, Erdoğan brought at national level his policies and electoral tactics promoting an unprecedented liberalization of society, economy, and politics. As mayor and as Prime Minister, Erdoğan was capable of heading a broad coalition of Islamist movements that shared a desire for redemption from being marginalized. However, after 2010 this broad coalition started to crack and a new opposition emerged among the Islamist wing showing all its complexity and imposing a deeper theoretical reflexion on the nature of Islamism in contemporary Turkey. In spring 2012, an intellectual debate on the nature of Islamism was unable to reach a new definition of the ideology. Moreover, one year later, the participation of “Antikapitalist Müslümanlar” to Gezi Parkı’s protests and the strong clashes between the Gülen Movement and AK Parti in the local elections’ campaign has shown how complicate is the Turkish Islamist scene. Based on these premises, my paper intends to reflect on the nature of Islamism and Post-Islamism in Turkey and its different perspectives. I will focus mainly on the Turkish intellectuals’ attempts to define Islamism presenting intellectual debates and their own definition starting from the Summer 2012 debate. Lastly, my paper will attempt a definition of today’s post-Islamism in Turkey focusing on its main features.
ijhssnet.com
After the military coup of 12 September 1980, the field of intellectual production in Turkey has gone through a structural transformation with the strategies conducted by state policies. The most prominent "intellectual breakthrough" in the process of transformation was executed by the Islamist intellectuals. This enterprise, which is also known as "the new Muslim Intellectual movement" in the literature, led Muslim section who for many years has had an ambivalent relationship with the political field to "discover politics". Until the 80s and the middle of the 90s, the new Muslim intellectuals had constructed an opposing intellectual discourse which had been established on the disagreement between modernity and the Islamic. For Muslim sections, the dominant figures of this innovative discourse were leading Muslim intellectuals like İsmet Özel, Rasim Özdenören and Ali Bulaç. However, the AK Party's coming to power in the 2000s with an Islamic ideological background, especially successful mobilization of the Islamic movements in harmony with capital have caused erosions in arguments which the new Muslim intellectual had once supported. In this context, the main argument in this paper is that, in contrast to the authoritarian identity of the official ideology, Islamic intellectuals, who have entered into a relative alliance with different ideological positions under the title of "democratic republic", have become the discourse producers of liberal positions. Another factor within this position shift is the economic-political process which is nowadays called the "Protestantization of Islam".
Every important aspect of the life, organization and the culture of Western society is in extraordinary crisis. Its body and mind are sick and there is hardly a spot on its body which is not sore, nor any nervous fibre which functions soundly. 1 We would like to thank Ümit Cizre for her comments and suggestions. 1 P. A. Sorokin, The Crisis of Our Age (Oxford: Oneworld, 1941Oneworld, , 1992: 13. bs_bs_banner
The rise of political Islam in Turkey and the Middle East is hardly an under-examined subject. Endless articles, academic papers and books are churned out to feed an insatiable demand for work in the area. Into this cacophony steps Turkish academic Kayhan Delibaş, whose new book examines the advance of political Islam in Turkey in the 1980s and 90s. Delibaş makes a plea for objectivity throughout, saying he seeks to examine the causes of the rise of Islamism in Turkey “rather than dealing with appearances.” It is not, he writes, his goal to “judge, condemn or defend the Islamists’ worldview.” The book strives to be academic in a particular sense of the word: For Delibaş, political Islam in Turkey is neither good nor bad, it simply is.
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