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   Book Info

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Turks Today, The  
Author: Andrew Mango
ISBN: 1585676152
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

From Publishers Weekly
Istanbul-born, British-based Mango (Atatürk) offers an insightful, sympathetic portrait of recent Turkish history. The first third of the book discusses the growth of the Turkish state after Atatürk's death in 1938, with a fitful spread of democracy, clashes with Greece and the departure of Istanbul's Greek community. Economic and social conflict from 1960 to 1980 was subsequently "contained" by a military-driven constitution and rapprochement with Europe. A battle over the logo of the mayoralty of Ankara, the capital, illustrates the recent negotiations between Islamists and secularists. Istanbul, whose "infrastructure does not match its size," is growing as a regional base. In impoverished, traditionalist eastern Turkey, "the Third World has not been banished," though Mango argues that integration with the state—if not assimilation—is the best hope for the Kurdish minority. Turkey today, Mango suggests, resembles the late modernizing countries of southern Europe in many ways. He sees potential for a fully democratic and secular state, but warns that it takes time to "implant Western institutions in non-Western soil." Though this volume lacks some of the bite and immediacy of a journalist's book like Stephen Kinzer's Crescent and Star, it emerges as a more thorough introduction to a less-known but increasingly vital country. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From The Washington Post's Book World/washingtonpost.com
If countries could be vegetables, Turkey would be an onion. Every time you take off a layer of skin, hoping to get to the core, you come across yet another skin. In The Turks Today, Andrew Mango successfully peels modern Turkey to its core. Most people who have rubbed elbows with Turks might suggest that they are experiencing an identity crisis, torn between the East and the West. In contrast, Mango, who was born in Istanbul, says the Turks have a strong sense of national identity. The Turks are "a distinct people with a Muslim background," he writes, who think like the West more so "than do their Muslim neighbors to the east and south." In the post-Sept. 11 world, Turkey indeed stands out. To what does the country owe its uniqueness? Turkey's position between Europe and the Middle East is a major factor. However, Kemal Ataturk's legacy of secular democracy in a Muslim society is even more important. Clearly, Ataturk was a visionary politician, but why has Turkey managed to remain a secular democracy more than 60 years after his death? Why has it not fallen like Iran's pro-Western regime, which collapsed like a house of cards in 1979, or declined like Egypt, an intellectual powerhouse in the 1930s that is now a crumbling edifice? Well, Ataturk got it right. He made Turkey a secular republic in the 1920s, long before it became a democracy in 1950. Hence, even after Ataturk's own Republican People's Party (CHP) lost Turkey's first free multiparty elections in 1950, secularism was able to survive. Not only that, it was now armed with democracy to defend itself. For example, when members of the Muslim Ticani order started mutilating Ataturk's statues in 1951 and attacking secularism, the Democrat Party, which had just defeated the CHP, passed a law to protect Ataturk's legacy. And more recently, when the Turkish military challenged the Islamist Welfare Party government in 1997, it found many allies within the country, ranging from secular political parties and media to NGOs and women's groups. Women's participation in the anti-Islamist alliance was not an accident. Turkish women are "much more emancipated and better able to realize their potential" than women in other Muslim countries, Mango writes. The second reason why Turkey works is the Alevis. Little known outside the country, Alevis are liberal Muslims who profess a syncretic version of Islam laden with elements of Sufism and Shamanism, the Turks' pre-Islamic faith. Alevis shun fundamentalism and cherish secularism. According to Mango, they represent a "distinctively Turkish humanist Islam open to modernity." While planting the seeds of secular democracy, Ataturk found inspiration in 19th-century French and European sociology. Therefore, contemporary Turkey shares many similarities with France, including administrative practices and legal structures. Along the same line, secularism in Turkey, like the French concept of laicité, provides freedom from religion. Just as Turkey learned from Europe in the past, that continent, grappling with a growing and restless Muslim community, can now turn to Turkey for ideas. Turkish secularism has created a tradition of "state Islam" whereby the government builds and staffs mosques to curb the influence of jihadist preachers. Meanwhile, Turkish Islam "has learnt to live in a secular state in a society where secular values prevail," Mango writes. Turkey has much to offer France and the European Union. Even so, Turkey's path to the E.U. is full of uncertainties. Although Ankara, which applied to join in 1987, was recently invited to start accession talks in October 2005, resistance to Turkey's membership is rife in Europe -- ironically, especially in France. Most Europeans say, for instance, that Ankara's human- rights record is too negative. "Turkish citizens are at least as free as their neighbours in the Balkans," Mango contends. Other critics say that Ankara is too poor for Brussels. Turkey surely has catching up to do with Europe. It needs to improve its economy and reform its heavily centralized, inefficient government, which Mango sees as a drain. All the same, Turkey is a southern European country. Like Greece and Spain, it has a history of military involvement in politics; like Portugal's, its economy is dominated by large family-owned conglomerates; and like Italy, it possesses an intricate network of social structures. For the Turks, joining the E.U. is not about entering Europe; it is about going back to Europe. Almost half of them are of European descent, ranging from Hungarian Muslims and Bosnians to Greek Muslims and Balkan Turks, who have been driven out of the continent ever since the territorial demise of the Ottoman Empire started in the late 17th century. Even in its worst days in the 19th century, Turkey was known as the "sick man of Europe," not the sick man of the Middle East. The Turks might well be ready for Europe; the Europeans, though, do not seem ready to take them into their midst. As Andrew Mango makes clear, modern Turkey is not an oddity; it is, however, a rare kind of nation that deserves special attention. Reviewed by Soner Cagaptay Copyright 2005, The Washington Post Co. All Rights Reserved.

From Booklist
Geographically and culturally, Turkey lies at the crossroads between Europe and the Near East. Mango was born in Turkey and has written a widely praised biography of Ataturk, the founder of the modern Turkish state. Here, he traces the evolution of the Turkish Republic since the death of Ataturk. This fascinating and timely survey is both a political history and a cultural examination of a diverse, dynamic society. From a military standpoint, Turkey is staunchly European, since it forms the eastern anchor of NATO. Politically, Turkey is nominally democratic, but the military continues to wield inordinate influence. In the cultural sphere, the Turkish elites have traditionally been strong secularists, yet there are desires among many, particularly in rural areas, to emphasize the role of religion in public life and to forge stronger ties with other Islamic countries. With Turkey pressing hard for admittance to the European Union, while conflict rages in neighboring Iraq, Turkey is of vital importance to American interests, so this readable and well-researched work has great value. Jay Freeman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved




The Turks Today

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Eighty years have passed since Mustafa Kemal Ataturk founded the Turkish Republic out of the ruins of the Ottoman Empire and set it on the path of modernization. He was determined that his country should be accepted as a member of the family of civilized nations. Today, Turkey is a rapidly developing country, an emergent market, and a medium-sized regional power with the second strongest army in NATO. It is an open country that attracts millions of tourists, thousands of foreign businessmen, and hundreds of researchers. They enjoy Turkish hospitality, experience its rich landscape and history, but find it hard to form an overall picture of the country. In this sequel to his acclaimed biography, Ataturk, Andrew Mango provides such a portrait, tracing the republic's development since the death of its founder and bringing to life the Turkish people and their vibrant society. The Turks Today interprets the latest academic research for a broader audience, making this highly readable book the definitive work on modern Turkey.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

Istanbul-born, British-based Mango (Ataturk) offers an insightful, sympathetic portrait of recent Turkish history. The first third of the book discusses the growth of the Turkish state after Atat rk's death in 1938, with a fitful spread of democracy, clashes with Greece and the departure of Istanbul's Greek community. Economic and social conflict from 1960 to 1980 was subsequently "contained" by a military-driven constitution and rapprochement with Europe. A battle over the logo of the mayoralty of Ankara, the capital, illustrates the recent negotiations between Islamists and secularists. Istanbul, whose "infrastructure does not match its size," is growing as a regional base. In impoverished, traditionalist eastern Turkey, "the Third World has not been banished," though Mango argues that integration with the state-if not assimilation-is the best hope for the Kurdish minority. Turkey today, Mango suggests, resembles the late modernizing countries of southern Europe in many ways. He sees potential for a fully democratic and secular state, but warns that it takes time to "implant Western institutions in non-Western soil." Though this volume lacks some of the bite and immediacy of a journalist's book like Stephen Kinzer's Crescent and Star, it emerges as a more thorough introduction to a less-known but increasingly vital country. (Jan.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

This new work summarizes the state of Turkey nearly 70 years after the death of Ataterk, the republic's founding leader. Mango (Ataterk), who has been writing about Turkey for decades, covers history and politics in the first third of the text and devotes the rest of the book to society and culture. The information is densely packed into these pages and the nonspecialist reader might need more explanation and background since many of the individuals and events have not been prominently covered in US media. For further study, recent works on the subject include Amikam Nachmani Turkey: Facing a New Millennium and Turkish Transformation: New Century, New Challenges, edited by Brian Beeley. A NATO member, Turkey has long been an important U.S. ally, and its pending application to join the European Union will only augment its significance. Libraries that want to add such a country overview should consider this one.-Marcia L. Sprules, Council on Foreign Relations Lib., New York Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

A dense look at the modern history of Turkey, focusing on human conflict and bureaucratic details. In a sequel to Ataturk (2000), Mango takes up the story of modern Turkey from Ataturk's demise, necessitating that he address both Turkey's years of violent tumult and its emergence as a competitive, technologically advanced nation. In his first section, Mango traces several distinct narratives of conflict and compromise from 1938 to the present. The wartime President, Ismet Inonu, skillfully played his country's interests against both Allies and Axis, continuing a political pattern of Turkey being shepherded by a wily strongman. In the 1950s, ten years of Democrat party rule produced substantial technological and agricultural gains and advanced the government's ambitious desire for NATO membership, yet also established underlying causes of domestic unrest. In the 1960s and 1970s, Turkey's growing pains were all too evident: its controversial military occupation of Cyprus was merely the public face of a complicated and bitter civil fight that resulted in numerous assassinations and street killings. Ironically, it took a 1980 military coup that restored law and order "by draconian means" to begin a return to the forward-looking secularism first espoused by Ataturk. In his second section, Mango systematically examines the country's present achievements in economics and education and the transformations that are still underway in the revered cities of Ankara and Istanbul (the putative centers of government and cultural achievement, respectively). Throughout, Mango seems fascinated by the minutiae, a quality that lends his book the feel of a nation's lived experience. Still, it's easy for areader to get lost among the shifting sands of conspiracy and commerce. Although Mango begins his survey by noting that "The unevenness of modernization and of material progress makes it hard to sum up the state of Turkey today," it's clear by the time he concludes that the Turks remain a forward-looking and pragmatic people. A useful historical survey, though arguably more for serious inquirers than tourists.

     



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