A New Book: Is the Turk a White Man? Race and Modernity in the Making of Turkish Identity
Murat Ergin,
Koç University
Brill 2017
In 1909, the US Circuit Court
in Cincinnati set out to decide “whether a Turkish citizen shall be
naturalized as a white person”; the New York Times article on the
decision, discussing the question of Turks’ whiteness, was cheekily
entitled “Is the Turk a White Man?” Within a few decades, having
understood the importance of this question for their modernization
efforts, Turkish elites had already started a fantastic scientific
mobilization to position the Turks in world history as the generators of
Western civilization, the creators of human language, and the forgotten
source of white racial stock. In this book, Murat Ergin examines how
race figures into Turkish modernization in a process of interaction
between global racial discourses and local responses.
Murat Ergin, Ph.D. (2005),
University of Minnesota, is Associate Professor of Sociology at Koç
University. His research interests include nationalism, race, ethnicity,
cultural boundaries, and death.
Table of contents
CHAPTER 1: WHY THIS BOOK SHOULD NOT HAVE BEEN WRITTEN
Race and the Turkish Case
Why Care About the Turkish Case?
The West = Theory; The Rest = “Mere” Case
Cases and National Boundaries
CHAPTER 2: THE REPUBLICAN CONVERSION NARRATIVE
Rewriting History
CHAPTER 3: ENCOUNTERS WITH THE “WEST”
Becoming White
The Ghosts of the Past: Ottoman Modernization and Encounters with the West
The Ottoman Interest in Race
Ziya Gökalp: The Official Ideologue of the Republic?
The Formation of the “Terrible Turk”: Western Perceptions
The Problem of Periodization
CHAPTER 4: RACE IN EARLY REPUBLICAN TURKEY
Racial Vocabularies
Mermaids, Fish, Humans: The Taxonomic Discourse
Biometric Mobilization to Protect and Improve the Race
Anthropometric Mobilization to “Discover” the Turkish Race
CHAPTER 5: CLOSE ENCOUNTERS AND RACIAL DISCOURSES
Intellectual Exchange and Historical Contingency
The University Reform and Émigré Scholars
Conflicting Loyalties: Expertise in the Service of Local and Universal Agendas
Afet İnan and Eugène Pittard: Personal Interaction in Search of Anthropometric Essences
CHAPTER 6: RACE IN CONTEMPORARY TURKEY
Race, and Ethnicity, and Nation
Race in Contemporary Turkey
CHAPTER 7: CONCLUSION