Media, Religion, Citizenship
Transnational Alevi Media and Its Audience
Abstract
This book is about Alevi media and the ways in which it has generated a particular form of citizenship that I call transversal citizenship. Alevis have been struggling for the right of recognition and equal citizenship in Turkey for decades. Despite this political struggle and its acknowledgement in the field of Alevi studies, their rights claims, with a few exceptions, have not been considered as acts of citizenship. Instead, their demands for equal citizenship have been situated within the framework of ‘identity politics’ in the post-Cold War context usually with pejorative undertones. This book examines the contemporary Alevi movement through theory of citizenship enactment and argues that Alevi media paves the way for transversal imaginaries and rights claims that embed different spatial levels into Alevi politics. In this book I also argue that in order to unpack the socio-political dynamics of Alevi media we must adopt a community-centred approach and make sense of Alevis’ boundary-making practices, political divisions and ethnic diversity. The book contributes to the decolonising of media studies by offering a critical perspective on community media and the decolonising of Alevi studies by critically examining some key postulates and unquestioned assumptions about the Alevi community which have been highly influenced by Turkish nationalism.
Keywords
media religion citizenship migration Alevis TurkeyDOI
10.5871/bacad/9780197267424.001.0001ISBN
9780197267424, 9780198888840Publisher
Oxford University PressPublisher website
https://global.oup.com/Publication date and place
Oxford, 2023Grantor
Series
British Academy Monographs,Classification
Media studies
Media studies: TV and society
Migration, immigration and emigration
Relating to migrant groups / diaspora communities or peoples