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ID128223
Title ProperCaptive Turks
Other Title InformationCrimean Tatars in pan-tourist literature
LanguageENG
AuthorFinnin, Rory
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)It has become accepted that, during the Soviet period, Turkey 'ignored the plight' of the Crimean Tatars, who were brutally deported to Central Asia by Stalin in 1944. This narrative of Turkish indifference with respect to the Crimean Tatar 'question' overlooks a corpus of material that tells something of a different story. This corpus is literary. The Crimean Tatars figured centrally in Pan-Turkist poems and pulp fiction novels as protagonists whose victimization by the Communist regime was represented in order to provoke outrage and action, not silence and passivity. These literary texts seek to elicit in the reader what can be called ' irredentist solidarity , a convergence of fellow-feeling that involves a total identification of the Other as the same.
`In' analytical NoteMiddle Eastern Studies Vol.50, No.2; March 2014: p.291-308
Journal SourceMiddle Eastern Studies Vol.50, No.2; March 2014: p.291-308
Key WordsTurkey ;  History ;  History - Turkey ;  Crimean Tatar ;  Pan-Turkish ;  Central Asia ;  Soviet Period ;  Stalin - 1944 ;  Communist Regime ;  Irredentist Solidarity ;  Pan-Tourist