Cold War masculinities in Turkish literature : a survey of March 12 novels : proefschrift ter verkrijging van de graad van Doktor aan de Universiteit Leiden op gezag van Rector Magnificus prof. mr. P.F. van der Heijden volgens besluit van het College voor Promoties te verdedigen op dinsdag 25 November 2008 klokke 13.45 uur / door Çimen Gunay-Erkol, geboren te Ankara, Turkey in 23 November 1977.

Title
  1. Cold War masculinities in Turkish literature : a survey of March 12 novels : proefschrift ter verkrijging van de graad van Doktor aan de Universiteit Leiden op gezag van Rector Magnificus prof. mr. P.F. van der Heijden volgens besluit van het College voor Promoties te verdedigen op dinsdag 25 November 2008 klokke 13.45 uur / door Çimen Gunay-Erkol, geboren te Ankara, Turkey in 23 November 1977.
Published by
  1. Leiden : Universiteit Leiden, 2008.
Author
  1. Gunay-Erkol, Çimen, 1977-

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Details

Additional authors
  1. Rijksuniversiteit te Leiden
Description
  1. vii, 339 p. : ill., facsims., ports.; 21 cm.
Summary
  1. The military intervention of 12 March 1971 traumatized 1968 radicalism in Turkey "radically". March 12 novels offer testimonies of the period disguised in imaginative stories about the sufferings and anxieties of individuals in 1970s Turkey. My hypothesis is that the March 12 novel is not simply a fallout from the military intervention but a complex mixture of sexual-social-political critique with a testimonial historiography of the events surrounding 12 March 1971. I argue that these novels carry out a critique of hypermasculinity, using excessive masculinity as a metaphor for the abuse of power that permeated the society. This aspect of the March 12 novel did not figure prominently in its reception in Turkey. What we have in March 12 novels is an image of manhood that is unquestionably impaired. This image links the questioning in the novels of corrupt state politics to the questioning of corrupt gender politics and the crises of 1968 radicalism to crises of gender. The March 12 novel critically examines the roots of the hunger for power and challengingly argues that the problem about recurring military regimes in Turkey is incorrectly conceived as the military question while the real problem is the tendency of people to go with power.
Uniform title
  1. Turkish thesis collection.
Subject
  1. 1900 - 1999
  2. Turkish fiction > 20th century > History and criticism
  3. Turkish literature > 20th century > History and criticism
  4. Masculinity > Turkey
  5. New Historicism
  6. Civil-military relations > Turkey
  7. Gender identity > Turkey
  8. Abuse of administrative power > Turkey
  9. Cold War in literature
  10. Nineteen seventies
  11. Turkey > History > Coup d'état, 1971
Genre/Form
  1. Academic Dissertation
  2. Academic theses
  3. Criticism, interpretation, etc.
  4. History
  5. Thèses et écrits académiques.
Owning institution
  1. Harvard Library
Bibliography (note)
  1. Includes bibliographical references (p. 287-301) and index.
Language (note)
  1. In English; quotations in Turkish; summary in Dutch.
Processing action (note)
  1. committed to retain