Taken from the 'Angry Nation' website
11 March 2011, Friday – UK Launch at the School of Oriental and African Studies, together with the SOAS Rebetiko Group.
14 March 2011, Monday, University of Exeter, hosted by Exeter Turkish Studies.
16 March, Wednesday, Edinburgh, Blackwells, hosted by the Centre for the Advanced Study of the Arab World (CASAW)
Launch events will also be held in:
Thessaloniki at the the University of Macedonia and at the Navarino Network, in Athens, Nicosia and Istanbul.
"Since its re-emergence as nation-state in 1923, Turkey has often looked like an odd appendix to the West situated in the borderlands of Europe and the Middle East. Economically backward, inward looking, marred by political violence, yet a staunch NATO ally, it has been eyed with suspicion by both East and West. The momentous changes in the regional and world order after 1989 have catapulted the country back to the world stage. Ever since, Turkey has turned into a major power broker and has developed into one the largest economies in the world. In the process, however, the country has failed to solve its ethnic, religious and historical conflicts peacefully. At this historical turning point, Kerem Oktem charts the contemporary history of Turkey, exploring such key issues as the relationship between religion and the state, Kurdish separatism, the relationship between Turkey and Israel and the ongoing controversy over an entry into the EU. Readable but comprehensive, this is the story of contemporary Turkey retold from the margins as well as from the centre, and the definitive book on the countrys erratic transformation from a military dictatorship to a maturing, if still troubled, democracy."
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