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Urban Encounters at the Margins: Eth...
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Can, Sule.
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Urban Encounters at the Margins: Ethno-Religious Conflict and Political Change at the Turkish-Syrian Border.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Urban Encounters at the Margins: Ethno-Religious Conflict and Political Change at the Turkish-Syrian Border./
作者:
Can, Sule.
出版者:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2018,
面頁冊數:
259 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 79-10, Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International79-10A.
標題:
Cultural anthropology. -
電子資源:
https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=10751779
ISBN:
9780355812992
Urban Encounters at the Margins: Ethno-Religious Conflict and Political Change at the Turkish-Syrian Border.
Can, Sule.
Urban Encounters at the Margins: Ethno-Religious Conflict and Political Change at the Turkish-Syrian Border.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2018 - 259 p.
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 79-10, Section: A.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--State University of New York at Binghamton, 2018.
This item is not available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses.
The Syrian Civil War has displaced millions of Syrians since March 2011 and has drastically changed the lives of those in the Turkish-Syrian borderlands. Antakya (Hatay), which was annexed by the Republic of Turkey from Syria under the French Mandate in 1939, is a border province that accommodates hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees today. Although the province has long been renowned for its ethnic and religious diversity, the influx of the Syrian refugees and Turkey's Syria policy have created new ethno-religious tensions and have shifted the dynamics of everyday life in Antakya. Drawing on micro-historical approaches to boundary-making and state formation, this ethnographic study focuses first on how the Syrian Civil War has transformed urban everyday life in this border city and re-defined ethno-religious boundaries and locals' relations to the state since 2011. It examines the ways in which ethno-religious boundaries are re-produced in Antakya in relation to the Syrian refugees and Turkish state's border policies. Second, it particularly looks at "urban encounters" at central, diverse districts in Antakya in order to show how sectarian affiliations become significant in mundane everyday life decisions and how they impact the accommodation of Syrian refugees by analyzing economic practices and labor relations. These urban encounters entail the ways in which Syrian refugees navigate in the city of Antakya; negotiate their employment and mobility and struggle with governmental institutions. By looking at negotiations of "Syrianness", ethno-religious and political identities at the borderlands; this dissertation analyzes political changes as well as continuities at the peripheries of the nation and state effects at the margins. Lastly, by analyzing Turkish migration regime and its genealogy, this dissertation investigates the ways in which 'sectarianism' is implicated in the politics of the Syrian Civil War and how sectarian discourses have shifted political landscape in Antakya. This ethnographic research was conducted between 2012-2016 in the province of Antakya (Hatay). This project suggests that the spatial, political and social divisions in border cities will increase as ethnic and religious identities become more politicized.
ISBN: 9780355812992Subjects--Topical Terms:
2122764
Cultural anthropology.
Subjects--Index Terms:
Alawites
Urban Encounters at the Margins: Ethno-Religious Conflict and Political Change at the Turkish-Syrian Border.
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The Syrian Civil War has displaced millions of Syrians since March 2011 and has drastically changed the lives of those in the Turkish-Syrian borderlands. Antakya (Hatay), which was annexed by the Republic of Turkey from Syria under the French Mandate in 1939, is a border province that accommodates hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees today. Although the province has long been renowned for its ethnic and religious diversity, the influx of the Syrian refugees and Turkey's Syria policy have created new ethno-religious tensions and have shifted the dynamics of everyday life in Antakya. Drawing on micro-historical approaches to boundary-making and state formation, this ethnographic study focuses first on how the Syrian Civil War has transformed urban everyday life in this border city and re-defined ethno-religious boundaries and locals' relations to the state since 2011. It examines the ways in which ethno-religious boundaries are re-produced in Antakya in relation to the Syrian refugees and Turkish state's border policies. Second, it particularly looks at "urban encounters" at central, diverse districts in Antakya in order to show how sectarian affiliations become significant in mundane everyday life decisions and how they impact the accommodation of Syrian refugees by analyzing economic practices and labor relations. These urban encounters entail the ways in which Syrian refugees navigate in the city of Antakya; negotiate their employment and mobility and struggle with governmental institutions. By looking at negotiations of "Syrianness", ethno-religious and political identities at the borderlands; this dissertation analyzes political changes as well as continuities at the peripheries of the nation and state effects at the margins. Lastly, by analyzing Turkish migration regime and its genealogy, this dissertation investigates the ways in which 'sectarianism' is implicated in the politics of the Syrian Civil War and how sectarian discourses have shifted political landscape in Antakya. This ethnographic research was conducted between 2012-2016 in the province of Antakya (Hatay). This project suggests that the spatial, political and social divisions in border cities will increase as ethnic and religious identities become more politicized.
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