Contested Modernities: ‘Diverse Voices’ of the Pioneering Journalists in the Ottoman Empire
Contested Modernities: ‘Diverse Voices’ of the Pioneering Journalists in the Ottoman Empire
Author(s): Banu DagtasSubject(s): Cultural history, Media studies, Political history, The Ottoman Empire
Published by: University of Lincoln and World Experience Campus Foundation
Keywords: journalism; modernization; pioneer journalists of Turkey; Young Ottomans;
Summary/Abstract: The history of journalism in Turkey, had moved in parallel to the history of modernization/Westernization which displays a top-down character. The first journalists (and novelists) after the Tanzimat of 1839 were state bureaucrats of the Ottoman administration. These “Young Ottomans”, or “Jenue Turks” as they were known, were in the vanguard of promoting a range of western ideas and concepts including: “journalism”, “public opinion”, “liberalism”, “constitutional monarchy”, “parliament”, “nation”, “nation-state”, and “modern family”. Most members of a group had tried to combine Western liberalism and Islam. This paper reviews the available analysis and commentary on the Young Ottomans in order to reassess their role in the process of Turkish Modernization/Westernization. A close reading of the work and careers of these key figures reveals the contested nature of negotiations around the relations between modernity (and its secular impetus) and understanding of the Islam of that time. The tensions between these two World views-which is still an ongoing problematic issue.
Journal: Journal of Media Critiques
- Issue Year: 3/2017
- Issue No: 12
- Page Range: 139-156
- Page Count: 18
- Language: English