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RADICAL SECULARIZING REFORMS (1) answer(s).
 
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ID:   120763


Religion and nation-building in the Turkish republic: comparison of high school history textbooks of 1931-41 and of 1942-50 / Ari, Basar   Journal Article
Ari, Basar Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract In the period from 1923 to 1946, the new regime was consolidated through a series of radical secularizing reforms. In order to make these reforms acceptable to a wider public, the new Republic tried to build a secular Turkish identity that does not include Islam. High school history textbooks were prepared to this end in 1931. It has generally been argued that the transition to a multi-party regime constituted a break by opening greater space for religion in society. However, the Kemalist Project to develop a secular Turkish identity without Islam ended in 1942, i.e. during the single-party rule of the Republican People's Party (RPP). The reasons behind this change show that the RPP was a more heterogeneous party in terms of the views of its policy-makers on religion.
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