Structures of knowledge in the Ottoman Empire and Turkish Republic, 1731­-1980 Cover Image

Structures of knowledge in the Ottoman Empire and Turkish Republic, 1731­-1980
Structures of knowledge in the Ottoman Empire and Turkish Republic, 1731­-1980

Author(s): Sanem Güvenç-SalgÂrlÂ
Subject(s): Philosophy, Social Sciences, Economy, Special Branches of Philosophy, Sociology, Philosophy of Science, Social Theory, Socio-Economic Research
Published by: Editura Rosetti International
Keywords: Turkey; Turkish modernization; Ottoman Empire; incorporation in the modern world-system; structures of knowledge; European Union;

Summary/Abstract: It is argued that the historiographical approaches prevalent in the Ottoman Empire and then in the Turkish Republic, observable in both academic and cultural production and implemented in the education system, were closely related to material transformations in politics and economics. It is further shown, however, that these relations were not of a one-way causality in either direction, but rather part of a singular whole. Debates over the construction of the past and the modernization project survive today in discussions arising from Turkey’s possible candidacy for membership in the European Union.

  • Issue Year: IV/2010
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 184-211
  • Page Count: 28
  • Language: English