Identity Politics: The Struggle for Recognition or Hegemony? Cover Image
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Identity Politics: The Struggle for Recognition or Hegemony?
Identity Politics: The Struggle for Recognition or Hegemony?

Author(s): İbrahim Kaya
Subject(s): Civil Society, Government/Political systems, Culture and social structure , Sociology of Culture, Sociology of Politics, Politics and Identity, Identity of Collectives
Published by: SAGE Publications Ltd
Keywords: civil society; identity politics; Islamism; new social movements; republic;

Summary/Abstract: This article aims to answer the question whether identity-based movements are free from economic interests. By analyzing the actions and orientations of the Islamists in Turkey, I show that new social movements based on cultural identities are far from representing the demands of groups for recognition. Rather, these movements aim at establishing hegemony by controlling the intellectual life of society by cultural means. It is insisted that we need a Gramscian view of culture in order to understand the so-called identity politics. Identity-based movements do not refer to the end of social classes, but to the emergence of a new middle class. And against the advocating perspectives on identity politics, I argue that the possible solution to the question of fragmentation could be found in the idea of republic that does not prioritize any culture but seeks a central element that makes it meaningful to talk about such a collective arrangement as society.

  • Issue Year: 21/2007
  • Issue No: 04
  • Page Range: 704-725
  • Page Count: 22
  • Language: English
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