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ID097521
Title ProperRe-imagining identity
Other Title Informationthe transformation of the Alevi Semah
LanguageENG
AuthorErol, Ayhan
Publication2010.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Until the early 1990s, the Alevi community, a heterodox Islamic sect in Turkey, actively avoided explaining their beliefs to outsiders and were against permitting non-Alevis to enter their cem rituals. By the mid-1990s they began to hold their rituals publicly in the cemevi (lit. cem house) in Turkish cities and in their cultural centres in the diaspora. Almost all Alevi associations or the cemevis in the diaspora and 'at home' have a semah group educated and organized by the executive. As opposed to rural/traditional cem rituals in which everybody may take part in the dance, the semahs performed in the urban cems are carried out by the semah groups consisting of young men and women. Moreover, these semah groups also perform in the non-ritual context. Thus, if the predominance of semah within the Alevi cem ritual is a 'fact' to be studied, then differences in their present interpretations in Turkish cities and in the diaspora is another. This article examines these differences in the context of the transformation of the semah from the representation of religious identity to that of ethno-political identity.
`In' analytical NoteMiddle Eastern Studies Vol. 46, No. 3; May 2010: p.375 - 387
Journal SourceMiddle Eastern Studies Vol. 46, No. 3; May 2010: p.375 - 387
Key WordsRe - Imagining Identity ;  Alevi Semah ;  Turkey ;  Ethno - Political Identity