Turkish transformation and the Soviet Union: navigating through the Soviet historiography on Kemalism |
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Authors: | Vahram Ter-Matevosyan |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Turkish Studies, Institute for Oriental Studies, National Academy of Sciences of Armenia, Yerevan, Armenia;2. Department of Political Science and International Affairs, American University of Armenia, Yerevan, Armenia |
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Abstract: | Being founded in the wake of the First World War, both Turkey and the Soviet Union followed revolutionary modernizing pathways. At the outset, one could trace many similar patterns in their radical modernization paradigms; however, their development models as well as political and social orders were radically distinct, which became more obvious with the passage of time. The paper discusses the external interpretations of Kemalism by observing the Soviet perspectives on the inception and evolution of Kemalism. Paying more attention to diplomatic, geopolitical and economic complexities of the Turkish-Soviet relations, scholars have rarely problematized the Soviet Union perceptions of Turkish ideological transformations. In reality, since the early 1920s, different state institutions, intellectual schools of thought and research in the Soviet Union closely observed the domestic transformations in Turkey by providing valuable insights on the perspective and the implications of the Kemalist transformation. The article also looks at the question of how the incorporation of Soviet perspectives can enrich the historiography and our understanding of Kemalism. |
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Keywords: | Turkey Kemalism Soviet Union Soviet historiography |
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