Neo-Ottomanism and the Politics of Emotions in Turkey : : Resentment, Nostalgia, Narcissism.
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Superior document: | Palgrave Studies in Political Psychology Series. |
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Place / Publishing House: | Cham : : Palgrave Macmillan,, 2024. ©2024. |
Year of Publication: | 2024 |
Edition: | First edition. |
Language: | English |
Series: | Palgrave Studies in Political Psychology Series
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Physical Description: | 1 online resource (196 pages) |
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Tokdoğan, Nagehan, 1984- Neo-Ottomanism and the Politics of Emotions in Turkey : Resentment, Nostalgia, Narcissism. First edition. Cham : Palgrave Macmillan, 2024. ©2024. 1 online resource (196 pages) text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier Palgrave Studies in Political Psychology Series. Intro -- Foreword -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- About the Author -- Abbreviations -- 1 Introduction -- 2 On Emotions, Politics and Political Symbols -- 2.1 Symbols as Objects of Emotional Investment -- 2.2 Nation-State, National Identity, Symbolic Politics and Emotions -- 2.3 Towards a Neo-Ottomanist National Identity -- References -- 3 Neo-Ottomanism as an Alternative Narrative of National Identity -- 3.1 The Birth of the Ottomanist Narrative as a Governmental Strategy -- 3.2 The Spectre Haunting the Republic -- 3.3 The Neo-Ottomanist Narrative as a Remedy for a Crisis of Identity: The 1980s -- 3.4 The Auspicious Alliance of Turkishness and Islam: The Neo-Ottomanist Wave of the 1990s -- 3.5 Re-establishing Ottomanism as the Constituent Narrative of National Identity: The AKP Period -- 3.6 The Spectre in Corporal Form in the AKP Period: Banal Ottomanism -- References -- 4 From Victimization to Omnipotence: The Pathos of Erdoğan as a Constituent Symbol of the Neo-Ottomanist Narrative -- 4.1 Wounds of the Past: The Legacy of Victimization Conveyed Through the Cult of the Leader -- 4.2 Distant Past, Chosen Trauma: Humiliation, Envy and Disgust in the Encounter with the West -- 4.3 The West Within: The CHP as Eternal Victimizer and an Object of Hatred, Anxiety and Anger -- 4.4 From Victimization to Omnipotence: Erdoğan Storming Out of Davos and Turkish Self-Identity -- 4.5 Rising from the Ashes, Straddling the Urge for Revenge and the Perception of Threat: Erdoğan as Sultan Abdülhamid II -- 4.6 Ontological Ressentiment as the Founding Emotion of the Neo-Ottomanist Narrative -- References -- 5 Istanbul as the Symbolic Space of the Neo-Ottomanist Narrative: Nostalgia, Romanticism and Domestic Imperial Greed -- 5.1 Sites of an Islamic Desire for Homecoming: The Hagia Sophia and Çamlıca Mosque. 5.2 Sites of War Between Two Cultures: The Atatürk Cultural Centre and the Ottoman Military Barracks -- 5.3 Sites of Gigantomanic Fantasies: Symbols of Supremacy over the West and Imperial Greed -- 5.4 Sites of Material Supremacy and an Appetite for Enrichment: The Lust for Constructions -- 5.5 Sites of Reconquest for Everyone: The Panorama 1453 Conquest Museum and the Yenikapı Square Conquest Festivities -- References -- 6 Towards the Construction of a Neo-Ottomanist Myth: The 'Legend' of 15 July and National Narcissism -- 6.1 On National Myths -- 6.2 The Birth of a Myth: 15 July -- 6.3 The Imprint of 15 July: Victory and Omnipotence -- 6.4 The 'Ordinary' Actors of an Extraordinary Event: Martyrs, Veterans and Heroes -- 6.5 From Ethos to Pathos: Yenikapı Spirit and the Establishment of National Narcissism -- 6.6 The Banal Manifestations of National Narcissism: Monuments, Commemorations, Marches and Designations -- 6.7 Whose Legend is 15 July? National Narcissism or Collective Narcissism? -- References -- 7 Conclusion -- 7.1 The Centenary of the Republic of Turkey: A National Identity Crisis? -- Index. Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources. Day, John William. 3-031-48722-2 Palgrave Studies in Political Psychology Series |
language |
English |
format |
eBook |
author |
Tokdoğan, Nagehan, 1984- |
spellingShingle |
Tokdoğan, Nagehan, 1984- Neo-Ottomanism and the Politics of Emotions in Turkey : Resentment, Nostalgia, Narcissism. Palgrave Studies in Political Psychology Series. Intro -- Foreword -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- About the Author -- Abbreviations -- 1 Introduction -- 2 On Emotions, Politics and Political Symbols -- 2.1 Symbols as Objects of Emotional Investment -- 2.2 Nation-State, National Identity, Symbolic Politics and Emotions -- 2.3 Towards a Neo-Ottomanist National Identity -- References -- 3 Neo-Ottomanism as an Alternative Narrative of National Identity -- 3.1 The Birth of the Ottomanist Narrative as a Governmental Strategy -- 3.2 The Spectre Haunting the Republic -- 3.3 The Neo-Ottomanist Narrative as a Remedy for a Crisis of Identity: The 1980s -- 3.4 The Auspicious Alliance of Turkishness and Islam: The Neo-Ottomanist Wave of the 1990s -- 3.5 Re-establishing Ottomanism as the Constituent Narrative of National Identity: The AKP Period -- 3.6 The Spectre in Corporal Form in the AKP Period: Banal Ottomanism -- References -- 4 From Victimization to Omnipotence: The Pathos of Erdoğan as a Constituent Symbol of the Neo-Ottomanist Narrative -- 4.1 Wounds of the Past: The Legacy of Victimization Conveyed Through the Cult of the Leader -- 4.2 Distant Past, Chosen Trauma: Humiliation, Envy and Disgust in the Encounter with the West -- 4.3 The West Within: The CHP as Eternal Victimizer and an Object of Hatred, Anxiety and Anger -- 4.4 From Victimization to Omnipotence: Erdoğan Storming Out of Davos and Turkish Self-Identity -- 4.5 Rising from the Ashes, Straddling the Urge for Revenge and the Perception of Threat: Erdoğan as Sultan Abdülhamid II -- 4.6 Ontological Ressentiment as the Founding Emotion of the Neo-Ottomanist Narrative -- References -- 5 Istanbul as the Symbolic Space of the Neo-Ottomanist Narrative: Nostalgia, Romanticism and Domestic Imperial Greed -- 5.1 Sites of an Islamic Desire for Homecoming: The Hagia Sophia and Çamlıca Mosque. 5.2 Sites of War Between Two Cultures: The Atatürk Cultural Centre and the Ottoman Military Barracks -- 5.3 Sites of Gigantomanic Fantasies: Symbols of Supremacy over the West and Imperial Greed -- 5.4 Sites of Material Supremacy and an Appetite for Enrichment: The Lust for Constructions -- 5.5 Sites of Reconquest for Everyone: The Panorama 1453 Conquest Museum and the Yenikapı Square Conquest Festivities -- References -- 6 Towards the Construction of a Neo-Ottomanist Myth: The 'Legend' of 15 July and National Narcissism -- 6.1 On National Myths -- 6.2 The Birth of a Myth: 15 July -- 6.3 The Imprint of 15 July: Victory and Omnipotence -- 6.4 The 'Ordinary' Actors of an Extraordinary Event: Martyrs, Veterans and Heroes -- 6.5 From Ethos to Pathos: Yenikapı Spirit and the Establishment of National Narcissism -- 6.6 The Banal Manifestations of National Narcissism: Monuments, Commemorations, Marches and Designations -- 6.7 Whose Legend is 15 July? National Narcissism or Collective Narcissism? -- References -- 7 Conclusion -- 7.1 The Centenary of the Republic of Turkey: A National Identity Crisis? -- Index. |
author_facet |
Tokdoğan, Nagehan, 1984- Day, John William. |
author_variant |
n t nt |
author2 |
Day, John William. |
author2_variant |
j w d jw jwd |
author2_role |
TeilnehmendeR |
author_sort |
Tokdoğan, Nagehan, 1984- |
title |
Neo-Ottomanism and the Politics of Emotions in Turkey : Resentment, Nostalgia, Narcissism. |
title_sub |
Resentment, Nostalgia, Narcissism. |
title_full |
Neo-Ottomanism and the Politics of Emotions in Turkey : Resentment, Nostalgia, Narcissism. |
title_fullStr |
Neo-Ottomanism and the Politics of Emotions in Turkey : Resentment, Nostalgia, Narcissism. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Neo-Ottomanism and the Politics of Emotions in Turkey : Resentment, Nostalgia, Narcissism. |
title_auth |
Neo-Ottomanism and the Politics of Emotions in Turkey : Resentment, Nostalgia, Narcissism. |
title_new |
Neo-Ottomanism and the Politics of Emotions in Turkey : |
title_sort |
neo-ottomanism and the politics of emotions in turkey : resentment, nostalgia, narcissism. |
series |
Palgrave Studies in Political Psychology Series. |
series2 |
Palgrave Studies in Political Psychology Series. |
publisher |
Palgrave Macmillan, |
publishDate |
2024 |
physical |
1 online resource (196 pages) |
edition |
First edition. |
contents |
Intro -- Foreword -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- About the Author -- Abbreviations -- 1 Introduction -- 2 On Emotions, Politics and Political Symbols -- 2.1 Symbols as Objects of Emotional Investment -- 2.2 Nation-State, National Identity, Symbolic Politics and Emotions -- 2.3 Towards a Neo-Ottomanist National Identity -- References -- 3 Neo-Ottomanism as an Alternative Narrative of National Identity -- 3.1 The Birth of the Ottomanist Narrative as a Governmental Strategy -- 3.2 The Spectre Haunting the Republic -- 3.3 The Neo-Ottomanist Narrative as a Remedy for a Crisis of Identity: The 1980s -- 3.4 The Auspicious Alliance of Turkishness and Islam: The Neo-Ottomanist Wave of the 1990s -- 3.5 Re-establishing Ottomanism as the Constituent Narrative of National Identity: The AKP Period -- 3.6 The Spectre in Corporal Form in the AKP Period: Banal Ottomanism -- References -- 4 From Victimization to Omnipotence: The Pathos of Erdoğan as a Constituent Symbol of the Neo-Ottomanist Narrative -- 4.1 Wounds of the Past: The Legacy of Victimization Conveyed Through the Cult of the Leader -- 4.2 Distant Past, Chosen Trauma: Humiliation, Envy and Disgust in the Encounter with the West -- 4.3 The West Within: The CHP as Eternal Victimizer and an Object of Hatred, Anxiety and Anger -- 4.4 From Victimization to Omnipotence: Erdoğan Storming Out of Davos and Turkish Self-Identity -- 4.5 Rising from the Ashes, Straddling the Urge for Revenge and the Perception of Threat: Erdoğan as Sultan Abdülhamid II -- 4.6 Ontological Ressentiment as the Founding Emotion of the Neo-Ottomanist Narrative -- References -- 5 Istanbul as the Symbolic Space of the Neo-Ottomanist Narrative: Nostalgia, Romanticism and Domestic Imperial Greed -- 5.1 Sites of an Islamic Desire for Homecoming: The Hagia Sophia and Çamlıca Mosque. 5.2 Sites of War Between Two Cultures: The Atatürk Cultural Centre and the Ottoman Military Barracks -- 5.3 Sites of Gigantomanic Fantasies: Symbols of Supremacy over the West and Imperial Greed -- 5.4 Sites of Material Supremacy and an Appetite for Enrichment: The Lust for Constructions -- 5.5 Sites of Reconquest for Everyone: The Panorama 1453 Conquest Museum and the Yenikapı Square Conquest Festivities -- References -- 6 Towards the Construction of a Neo-Ottomanist Myth: The 'Legend' of 15 July and National Narcissism -- 6.1 On National Myths -- 6.2 The Birth of a Myth: 15 July -- 6.3 The Imprint of 15 July: Victory and Omnipotence -- 6.4 The 'Ordinary' Actors of an Extraordinary Event: Martyrs, Veterans and Heroes -- 6.5 From Ethos to Pathos: Yenikapı Spirit and the Establishment of National Narcissism -- 6.6 The Banal Manifestations of National Narcissism: Monuments, Commemorations, Marches and Designations -- 6.7 Whose Legend is 15 July? National Narcissism or Collective Narcissism? -- References -- 7 Conclusion -- 7.1 The Centenary of the Republic of Turkey: A National Identity Crisis? -- Index. |
isbn |
3-031-48723-0 3-031-48722-2 |
callnumber-first |
J - Political Science |
callnumber-subject |
JQ - Europe |
callnumber-label |
JQ1758-1852 |
callnumber-sort |
JQ 41758 41852 |
illustrated |
Not Illustrated |
dewey-hundreds |
900 - History & geography |
dewey-tens |
950 - History of Asia |
dewey-ones |
956 - Middle East (Near East) |
dewey-full |
956.104 |
dewey-sort |
3956.104 |
dewey-raw |
956.104 |
dewey-search |
956.104 |
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AT tokdogannagehan neoottomanismandthepoliticsofemotionsinturkeyresentmentnostalgianarcissism AT dayjohnwilliam neoottomanismandthepoliticsofemotionsinturkeyresentmentnostalgianarcissism |
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hierarchy_parent_title |
Palgrave Studies in Political Psychology Series. |
is_hierarchy_title |
Neo-Ottomanism and the Politics of Emotions in Turkey : Resentment, Nostalgia, Narcissism. |
container_title |
Palgrave Studies in Political Psychology Series. |
author2_original_writing_str_mv |
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