Posted by Acturca in History / Histoire, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Andrew Mango, BBC Turkish Service, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Obituaries
The Daily Telegraph (UK) Thursday, September 18, 2014, p. 31
Obituaries
Atatiirk’s biographer and an authority on modern Turkey who ran the BBC’s foreign broadcasting service Andrew Mango, who has died aged 88, was Britain’s leading authority on modern Turkey and wrote the definitive biography of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the founder of the Turkish Republic. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in History / Histoire, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Angleterre, ANZAC, Australie, Çanakkale, Empire Ottoman, Gallipoli, Guerre, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Nouvelle-Zélande
Le Monde (France) jeudi 16 janvier 2014, p. SPA3
Spécial ~ Europa les lieux de conflits
Jose Miguel Calatayud (El Pais) Çanakkale, Envoyé spécial
Cent vingt mille hommes sont enterrés sur les lieux de la bataille. C’est un matin d’hiver froid et radieux. Le ferry fend paresseusement les eaux du détroit des Dardanelles de Çanakkale vers Eceabat, dans la presqu’île de Gallipoli, sur la côte nord-ouest de l’actuelle Turquie. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in History / Histoire, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: ANZAC, Australie, Çanakkale, Dardanelles, Empire Ottoman, Gallipoli, Guerre, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Nouvelle-Zélande, Winston Churchill
Le Figaro (France) no. 21460, vendredi 2 août 2013, p. 11
L’Été du Figaro ~ Les champs de bataille ~ Série (11/12)
Adrien Jaulmes
Le débarquement, en 1915, dans les Dardanelles, de l’Anzac (Australian and New Zeland Army Corps) fut un fiasco. Les épreuves partagées par les membres de ce corps d’armée australien et néo-zélandais allaient toutefois forger une première prise de conscience nationale pour ces Européens du bout du monde. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Middle East / Moyen Orient, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: AKP, Constitution, Middle East, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey
The Guardian (UK) Thursday, October 25, 2012, p. 24-25
Simon Tisdall, Istanbul
In the first of a series on Turkey, Simon Tisdall looks at whether the civil war in Syria, an economic dip and the ever-present Kurdish crisis could prove the PM’s undoing. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Art-Culture, Istanbul, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Ahmet Polat, Depo, exposition, International Center for Photography, Istanbul, Izmir, Mer Noire, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Pays-Bas, photographe, photographie, Turkey / Turquie
Vogue.com, 7 mars 2012
Pierre Groppo
Ce garçon là traverse toutes les frontières. Né d’un père turc et d’une mère hollandaise, Ahmet Polat a grandi aux Pays-Bas, où il est devenu photographe. Lauréat du Prix de l’International Center for Photography (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Academic / Académique, Acturca Journal Watch, Art-Culture, Books / Livres, Caucasus / Caucase, Central Asia / Asie Centrale, Economy / Economie, Energy / Energie, EU / UE, History / Histoire, Immigration, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Religion, Russia / Russie, South East Europe / Europe du Sud-Est, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE, USA / Etats-Unis.
Tags: A. Akpinar, A. Vardar, Ab Imperio, acculturation, Acturca Journal Watch, Adnan Menderes, Ahmet Sözen, AKP, Ali Çarkoğlu, Alkistis Sofou, All Azimuth, Alon Liel, Anthropological Quarterly, Antoine Hermary, Anton Kunst, Arab Spring, archeologie, Archives of Suicide Research, Area studies, Ayvalik, Çağla Kubilay, Balkans, Banu Baybars-Hawks, Berna Turam, Berna Yazıcı, Bulgaria, Burak Özçetin, Burcu Sümer, Byzance, Cahiers balkaniques, Cambridge University Library, Caucasus, Cennet Engin-Demir, Central Asia, Charles King Mallory IV, children, Christian Dustmann, Chrysostomos Pericleous, Cihan Tuğal, Civil-military relations, conflicts, Constitution, construction, CSDP, Cyprus, D. Beybin Kejanlıoğlu, David P. Goldman, Demet Yalçin Mousseau, democracy, Democratization, development, Development and Change, Dilek Özceylan, Dimitar Bechev, discourse analysis, Diyanet, Doğan Gurpinar, Dual Nationality, e-democracy, E. Fuat Keyman, E. Simsek, E.G. Browne, Economic Policy, economy, Educational policies, Egypt, Elçin Macar, elections, electoral behaviour, electricity energy, Eleonora Naxidou, Emre Erol, Emre Iseri, Energy Sources, Enis Dinç, Ergün Özbudun, Eric X. Li, Erman Coskun, Ersel Aydinli, Etain Tannam, ethnic minorities, EU, Eugen Stark, Europe, Eveline Reisenauer, F. Tavşan, Faruk Bilici, Félix Sartiaux, Feminist Economics, Foça, foreign policy, Fırat Cengiz, Gareth Chappell, Güliz Sütçü, Gülsüm Polat, gender, George M. Thomas, Georges Kostakiotis, Gergana Noutcheva, Germany, Gianandrea Lanzara, Gonul Tol, Government and Opposition, Grèce, Group Processes Intergroup Relations, Gudrun Biffl, Gulen movement, Habitat International, Hakan Köni, Hür Hassoy, headscarf, hellénisme, heritage culture, History, History Compass, Hootan Shambayati, human rights, humor magazines, Ibrahim Sirkeci, Ihsan Dagi, Ilias Vénézis, Ilter Turan, immigration, India, inequality, Insight Turkey, intégration, International Journal of Asian Studies, International Journal of Constitutional Law, International Journal of Educational Development, International Journal of Electronic Governance, Iran, Işıl Ergin, James A. Reilly, Jared Schroeder, Jürgen Gerdes, Jeffrey H. Cohen, Jeunes Turcs, Joëlle Dalègre, Journal of democracy, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, Journal of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, Journal of Muslims in Europe, Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, Journal of Visual Art Practice, K. Kaygusuz, Kaat Van Acker, Kerem Öktem, Kurds, Lars Hoffmann, littérature, Liza Mügge, M. Bilgili, M. H. Filiz, M. İ. Kömürcü, Macédoine, Macedonia, manuscripts, Marcin Terlikowski, Masaki Kakizaki, mass movements, Maureen Taylor, Mavi Marmara, Méropi Anastassiadou, Mediterranean Quarterly, Mehmet Hacısalihoğlu, Meltem Müftüler-Baç, MENA, Mert Moral, Mexico, Middle East, Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication, Middle East Quarterly, Middle Eastern Studies, Migrant Political Participation, migration, Migration Letters, Milli Görüs, Minorities, multiculturalism, Multiple Citizenship, Murat Akser, Murat Coskun, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Nalan Ova, nationalism, Nationalities Papers, Neera Ghaziuddin, neoliberalism, Nermin Saybaşılı, Neslihan Çevik, New Perspectives Quarterly (NPQ), newspaper, Nicolas Pitsos, Nilüfer Göle, Norbert Vanbeselaere, Norway, Nur Uysal, opposition, Ortadoğu Etütleri, Osman Balaban, Ottoman Empire, Oğuz Dilek, Palestine-Israel Journal, Parliamentary Affairs, Petar Todorov, Peter Brampton Koelle, Philip L. Martin, Phocée, Pinar Yazgan, Polish Quarterly of International Affairs, Political culture, political Islam, political parties, presse, public diplomacy, Public Health Nutrition, Public sector, public sphere, Pınar Akçalı, R. Okursoy, Ragan Updegraff, renewable energy, research centers, Revue européenne des migrations internationales, Roma, Salih Zoroglu, Saudi Arabia, Süleyman Polat, Senem Aydın Düzgit, Sener Aktürk, Serkan Yolcu, Sia Anagnostopoulou, social media, socioeconomic development, soft power, Sophia Laiou, Spyros Karavas, Stephanos Efthymiadis, suicides, sustainable growth, Svante E. Cornell, Syria, Tadd Graham Fernée, Tasos Kostopoulos, Tezcan Durna, The Middle East Journal, think tanks, Thomas Vitiello, Tommaso Frattini, Transnationalism, Turkey, Turkey-EU, Turkish Historical Review, Turkish migrants, Twitter, urban planning, USA, USSR, vakıf, wedding, West European Politics, western balkans, wind energy, women, Y. Tekin, Yane Sandanski, Yaniv Roznai, İpek İlkkaracan
Acturca Journal and Periodical Review, January 2012
Compiled by Ozan Yigitkeskin
Acturca Journal Watch monitors leading scholarly journals for articles of particular interest to scholars of diplomacy, foreign relations, and international history on Turkey. It is updated monthly. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Academic / Académique, Acturca Journal Watch, Art-Culture, Books / Livres, Caucasus / Caucase, Central Asia / Asie Centrale, Economy / Economie, Energy / Energie, EU / UE, History / Histoire, Immigration, Istanbul, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Religion, Russia / Russie, South East Europe / Europe du Sud-Est, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE, USA / Etats-Unis.
Tags: Abdulkadir Civan, Acturca Journal Watch, Afrique, AKP, Alain Vicky, Alternatives: Global, Applied Economics, Armenia, Arzu Cahantimur, Australia, Ayan Pelin Musil, Ayda Eraydin, Ayhan Kaya, Ayse Bugra, Ayse Güveli, Azerbaijan, Ömer Engin Lütem, Bayram Deviren, Benedict E. DeDominicis, Benjamin Gourisse, Benjamin K. Sovacool, bilateral relations, Bogdan Aurescu, Book Review, Bulgaria, Burkay Pasin, Bursa, Caspian Sea, Central Bank, Comparative Political Studies, Cultures & Conflits, customs union, Cyprus, Dani Rodrik, democracy, Design, Dilek Beyazli, Dilek Himam, Dış Politika - Foreign Policy, Economic Modelling, Elena Mazzeo, Emel Parlar Dal, Emiliano Alessandri, Eminegül Karababa, Engin Sorhun, Ersin Kantar, Ertuğrul Gündoğan, EU, EU / UE, EU membership, Eurasia. Rivista di Studi Geopolitici, Eurasian Journal of Business and Economics, European Commission, European Planning Studies, European Societies, EurOrient, Eva Derous, export, foreign policy, foreign trade, Futures, Gabe Ignatowa, gas pipeline, Gayane Novikova, Gökçe Tunç, Gülcay Tuna, Gülin Vardar, Gülsün Bilgehan, gender, Georgia, Germany, Germenis Panagis, Global Journal of Emerging Market Economies, Guido Westwerwelle, Harun Yüksel, Henk T. van der Molen, History / Histoire, International Journal of Intercultural Relations, International Journal of Middle East Studies, Irak, Istanbul, Jennifer M. Landig, Journal of Design History, K. Ali Akkemik, Kadri Gürsel, Kate Fleet, Liza Hopkins, Lloyd George, Local, Malaysia, Marietje Schaake, Marise Ph. Born, Media Culture Society, Merve Özdemirkiran, Mexico, Michael Provence, Michalis N. Michael, Middle East, Middle Eastern Studies, minority, Murat Somer, Muslim, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Mustafa Keskin, national identity, Nationalities Papers, Nevra Cem Ersoy, Nigar Göksel, Ohannes Geukjian, oil pipeline, Oktay Aksoy, Ottoman Empire, Patriarch Bartholomew I, Philosophy & Social Criticism, Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications, Political, political Islam, political parties, privatisation, Quaderni di Relazioni Internazionali, référendum, Review of Development Economics, Review of International Political Economy, Reşat Arım, Russia / Russie, S. Gülden Ayman, Saadet Kasman, Sadik J. Al-Azam, Sanem Şahin, Sümerbank, secularism, Semin Suvarierol, Senem Aydιn Düzgit, Serdar Denktaş, Seyfi Taşhan, Social Identities, social mobility, soft power, South Caucasus, Tarik Oguzlu, Tülin Vural-Arslan, Technological Forecasting and Social Change, The Information Society, The New Presence, Third World Quarterly, Thomas Marois, Turkey, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU, Turkish Cypriot, Turkish Historical Review, Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, V. Necla Geyikdagi, Wendy Kristianasen, Women's Studies International Forum, Ziya Öniş, Şinasi Aydemir
Acturca Journal and Periodical Review, May 2011
Compiled by Ozan Yigitkeskin
Acturca Journal Watch monitors leading scholarly journals for articles of particular interest to scholars of diplomacy, foreign relations, and international history on Turkey. It is updated monthly. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in History / Histoire, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Egypt, History / Histoire, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Norman Stone, Turkey, Turkey / Turquie
Newsweek (USA) February 20, 2011
by Norman Stone *
If history is any guide, there will not be an Atatürk in Cairo. A hundred years ago, Egyptians looked down on Turks: etrak bi itrak, ran the pun. “Turks are clods.” (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Academic / Académique, Acturca Journal Watch, Caucasus / Caucase, Central Asia / Asie Centrale, Economy / Economie, Energy / Energie, History / Histoire, Immigration, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Religion, Russia / Russie, South East Europe / Europe du Sud-Est, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE.
Tags: Acturca Journal Watch, Adana, Africa, Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar, AKP, alévis, Albert Rohan, Alevism, Alexander Bürgin, Amed Gökçen, and Society, Anti-imperialism, Arménie, Ateş Altınordu, autoeroticism, Ayfer Karakaya-Stump, Azerbaïdjan, Çiğdem Nas, Ömer Çelik, Baburhan Üzüm, Bayram Balci, Benjamin Katcher, Birol Akgün, British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, Bulgarie, Cahiers de la Méditerranée, Canan Çilingir, Carol Migdalovitz, Caroline Tee, Chechnya, China, CHP, communisme, Critique, Culture, Cultures & Conflits, Cyprus, David Shankland, développement, Devrim Sezer, Dilaver D. Gasimov, discourse analysis, Ebru Ertugal, Eduard Soler i Lecha, Egypt, Elise Massicard, Empire Ottoman, Ergenekon, Erol Kaymak, EU enlargement, Europäische Rundschau, Europe, European Journal of Political Research, European Political Science, euroscepticisme, Fatos Silman, Feminist Media Studies, foreign policy, Guerres mondiales et conflits contemporains, Haut-Karabakh, Hidir Temel, History / Histoire, History of European Ideas, Hizb ut-Tahrir, Hubert Faustmann, Hubyar, Human rights review, Iclal Cetin, identité, Ihsan Yilmaz, integration theories, Internal armed conflict, International Journal of Politics, International Journal of Refugee Law, International review of education, International Spectator, Ioannis N. Grigoriadis, Irmak Özer, Islam, James Dorsey, James Ker-Lindsay, Jean-Jacques Becker, Jochem Thijs, Journal of Contemporary European Studies, Journal of language and social psychology, Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, Juliet Chevalier-Watts, Kemal Kilicdaroglu, Kurds, langue, Linguistic reform, Loren Goldner, Marjoleine Zieck, Markus Dressler, Maykel Verkuyten, Méditerranée, Mehmet Çaglar, Mehmet Ögütçü, Mehmet Özkan, Mehmet Bardakçı, Melike Üzüm, Middle East Policy, minorités, modernity, multiculturalism, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Mustafa Suphi, Nadège Ragaru, Naqshbandi, Netherlands, Nigar Göksel, Paolo Verme, Perspectives: Central European Review of International Affairs, Peter Andrews, Peyami Safa, Piotr Zalewski, political parties, Political Science Quarterly, Politics & Society, Politics of language, Politix, privatization, Rana Deep Islam, réseaux communautaires, representation, Review of African Political Economy, Revue européenne des migrations internationales, RJEA, Robert Langer, Romanian Journal of European Affairs, Russia / Russie, Saime Özçürümez, Salih Hacioglu, Salih Turan Katircioğlu, Südosteuropa Mitteilungen, secularism, Semih Idiz, Sevil Çatak, Shahin Vallée, Social Compass, Speech analysis, Stéphane de Tapia, Suat Kınıklıoğlu, Tarik Oguzlu, Türkei, The Journal of Economic Inequality, The Journal of Modern African Studies, The World Economy, Thomas de Waal, Tolga Bölükbasi, Turcs, Turkey, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU, Turkish Communist Party, Turkish Policy Quarterly, UK, UNHCR, Ural Manço, urban migration, Uzbekistan, veil, Wars of National Liberation, World Policy Journal, Yezidi, Yezidism, Yuri Stoyanov, İnan Rüma
Acturca Journal and Periodical Review, December 2010
Compiled by Ozan Yigitkeskin
Acturca Journal Watch monitors leading scholarly journals for articles of particular interest to scholars of diplomacy, foreign relations, and international history on Turkey. It is updated monthly. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in France, History / Histoire, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Ataturk, conférence, France, History / Histoire, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Renée-Paule Guillot, Turkey / Turquie, Université Inter-âges du Bocage
Presse Océan (France)
5 avril 2009, Angers
Lorsqu’en novembre 1938, Kémal Atatûrk, le chef incontesté de la Turquie, meurt, le peuple tout entier lui rend un hommage unanime : « Nous avons perdu notre Père ; c’était un Dieu à l’échelle de la nation ». C’est par ces mots que Renée-Paule Guillot a débuté sa conférence à l’Université Inter-âges du Bocage ; avec empathie et passion, elle est venue parler de ce personnage exceptionnel « qui a posé les fondements de l’État Turc ». (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Academic / Académique, France, History / Histoire, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Ataturk, conférence, France, History / Histoire, l'Université inter-âges de Bressuire, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Renée-Paule Guillot, Turkey / Turquie
Presse Océan (France)
1 avril 2009, Angers
La prochaine conférence de l’Université inter-âges de Bressuire aura lieu demain jeudi, à 14 h 15, dans la salle des Congrès. Renée-Paule Guillot, journaliste, écrivain et historienne présentera « Kémal Atatürk : le pionnier de la Turquie moderne ». (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in History / Histoire, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Ankara, Grande assemblée nationale de Turquie, History / Histoire, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, traité de Lausanne, traité de Sèvres, Turkey / Turquie
Anadolu Agency (Turquie)
28 octobre 2008, Ankara
Le 10 août 1920, à l’issue de la Première Guerre mondiale, le traité de Sèvres partage l’Empire Ottoman, qui était l’allié de l’Allemagne, sortie vaincue du conflit. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: AKP, Ali Babacan, Ankara, Egemen Bagis, islamiste, laïcité, laïque, mausolée, MHP, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Sevgi Özel, Turkey / Turquie, voile
Agence France Presse
2 Février 2008
Plus de 100.000 personnes ont manifesté samedi à Ankara contre un projet de levée de l’interdiction du voile islamique dans les universités, présenté par le gouvernement turc comme une réforme nécessaire sur la voie de l’adhésion à l’Union européenne. (suite…)