2020
DOI: 10.17645/si.v8i1.2437
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The Great Secession: Ethno-National Rebirth and the Politics of Turkish–German Belonging

Abstract: Germany is facing a contemporary mainstreaming of the far right, which has a long tradition of wanting “Turks out!” Turkish immigrants have been the main strangers in Germany following the guest-worker treaty signed in 1961, physically close as friends, yet culturally distant as foes. From September 2015 onwards, German–Turkish politics of belonging, the Turkish issue, underwent a contentious period resulting in secessions between German and Turkish authorities in September 2017. Against this background, this … Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…67–70). However, in the absence of strong characters of ‘we’ and the ‘other’, these narratives of incremental improvement were less explicit about creating social boundaries than romances can be (Özvatan 2020). Previous work has identified the lack of tension in European stories more generally as a weakness (Della Sala 2016, p. 538; Gilbert 2008).…”
Section: Results: the Commission's Narratives In Migration And Citize...mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…67–70). However, in the absence of strong characters of ‘we’ and the ‘other’, these narratives of incremental improvement were less explicit about creating social boundaries than romances can be (Özvatan 2020). Previous work has identified the lack of tension in European stories more generally as a weakness (Della Sala 2016, p. 538; Gilbert 2008).…”
Section: Results: the Commission's Narratives In Migration And Citize...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Forchtner and colleagues argue that comedy and romance convey certainty of a better future and a faultless heroine at the cost of collective learning processes (Forchtner et al 2020, p. 212). Building on this, Özvatan argues that ‘tragic and ironic stories facilitate spanning social boundaries, while comic and romantic stories draw rigid and conclusive social boundaries’ (Özvatan 2020, pp. 287–288).…”
Section: Methods: Tracing the Commission's Narrativesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One function of humor is cultural critique (Driessen 2015); the topics of humor are never randomly chosen but are issues of social relevance in the time and place where the joke is made (Kuipers 2008). Relevant for this analysis is the role of humor in creating a focus on cultural assumptions to put them under scrutiny (Gilbert 2004;Procházka 2019).…”
Section: Biodeutsche(r): Challenging Ethnonational Ideologymentioning
confidence: 99%