The Problem of Pigeons Orientalism, Xenophobia and a Rhetoric of the 'Local' in North Cyprus
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Abstract
This article discusses the Orientalism at the heart of Turkish Cypriots’ visions of modernity, as well as the more recent effects of this Orientalism on the immigrants
from Turkey who now both compose and symbolise old Nicosia within the walls. The article, first, discusses the Kemalism of Turkish-Cypriot modernisation, looking at
Kemalism’s roots in a type of Orientalism aimed at the supposedly “backward” self. The initial arrival of Turkish immigrants on the island after 1974 and Turkish-
Cypriots’ initial reactions to them are also described. Later the article sketches the recent neoliberal privatisation in the north, its wealth effect, and the growing
distinction between Turkish Cypriots and working-class “others” that has become a defining facet of a new Turkish-Cypriot identity. In this process, the article shows
how representations of those “others,” especially in relation to the walled city of Nicosia, are inherently Orientalising, and it documents the ways in which this
representation affects the lives of those now living within the walls.
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Settlers, immigrants, Kemalism, Orientalism, xenophobia, Turkish-Cypriots and Nicosia
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