| Manufacturer | Palgrave Macmillan |
What happens when the concept of civil society moves from academia and policy contexts into other lives and worlds? Refractions of Civil Society in Turkey is a study of the makings, meanings, and magic of civil society. It explores how civil society as social imagining is evoked and brought to life among civic activists in Turkey.
The book illustrates that civil society is a contested concept which emerges as part of a social legitimacy struggle to represent authentic civil society. It moreover shows how civil society becomes powerful because it constitutes a means for civic activists to experience themselves as authentic subjects.
Review: A unique contribution to the study of Turkish civil society, deviating from the mainstream approaches in two important ways. First, Kuzmanovic eschews the use of civil society as a normative concept that can be populated with particular types of organizations, ideologies, or cultures. Second, she resists approaching civil society as a 'positive analytical term' that has definable boundaries vis-A -vis the state, market, and the family. . .
This book will be a fascinating read not only for those interested in Turkey and Turkish civil society but also for those looking for a fresh conceptual approach to the study of civil society in general.' a Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute A book with great empirical richness . . . In contrast to most of the existing literature, Kuzmanovic approaches civil society as a concept that is constantly in the making, evoked, and brought to life in different contexts . . .
The significance of civil society in Turkey lies for Kuzmanovic in the concept's power as a meaningful and empowering concept for individual actors. . . [This book] is an important contribution to a field that has been dominated by positivist-rationalist accounts of civil society. - Turkish Review Nonplussed by the cloying moralism of much of the existing literature, Daniella Kuzmanovic offers us a theoretically savvy discussion of the quest for social legitimacy and personal-existential authenticity that underlies the allure of civil society in Turkey.
A must-read for anyone interested in the dynamics of change in a society which has often been forced into preconceived analytical straitjackets. - Umut Ozkirimli, Center for Middle Eastern Studies, Lund University, Sweden Kuzmanovic's beautifully written, carefully nuanced account of Turkish NGOs is a significant contribution to analyses of civil society.
Kuzmanovic shows how understandings of civil society are historically placed, relational, and essentially contestedo
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