Istanbul-born, British-based Mango (Ataturk) offers an insightful, sympathetic portrait of recent Turkish history. The first third of the book discusses the growth of the Turkish state after Ataturk’s death in 1938, with a fitful spread of democracy, clashes with Greece and the departure of Istanbul’s Greek community. Economic and social conflict from 1960 to 1980 was subsequently «contained» by a military-driven constitution and rapprochement with Europe. A battle over the logo of the mayoralty of Ankara, the capital, illustrates the recent negotiations between Islamists and secularists. Istanbul, whose «infrastructure does not match its size,» is growing as a regional base. In impoverished, traditionalist eastern Turkey, «the Third World has not been banished,» though Mango argues that integration with the state—if not assimilation—is the best hope for the Kurdish minority. Turkey today, Mango suggests, resembles the late modernizing countries of southern Europe in many ways. He sees potential for a fully democratic and secular state, but warns that it takes time to «implant Western institutions in non-Western soil.» Though this volume lacks some of the bite and immediacy of a journalist’s book like Stephen Kinzer’s Crescent and Star, it emerges as a more thorough introduction to a less-known but increasingly vital country.
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