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Turkifying Poverty,or: the Phantom Pain of Izmir’s Lost Christian Working Class, 1924–26
Authors:Ellinor Morack
Institution:Lehrstuhl für Turkologie, Institute of Oriental Studies, Otto-Friedrich-Universit?t Bamberg, Bamberg, Germany
Abstract:This article shows that ‘Turkification’, a term widely used by historians of modern Turkey to refer to the forced transfer of property from Christian into Muslim hands, ought to be conceptualized not only in the sense of ‘enrichment’ but also, with regard to the working classes, as a process in which Muslim people inherited the poverty of their Christian predecessors. Taking ?zmir as a case in point, the article first describes the plight of the overwhelmingly Christian working class prior to 1922. It then studies reports and editorials that discussed the economic and social situation in ?zmir in the years 1923 to 1926, after the Turkish victory and forced migration of her Christian population. Over the course of these years, ?zmir experienced a serious economic crisis, and bread prices reached levels that led to widespread undernourishment and hunger among the city?s poor. Agricultural production was lagging behind pre-war levels, and positive effects of ‘Turkification? policies were failing to materialize. By analyzing the contemporary journalists? attempts at explaining the crisis, but also pointing out national and transnational factors that they were probably unaware of, the article makes an original contribution to the economic and social history of early republican Turkey.
Keywords:Turkey 1922–1938  early republican Turkey  ?zmir  Smyrna  labor history  Turkification  poverty  urban poor  bread prices  urban history
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