In the late 1980s, the Alevis, at that time thought to be largely assimilated into the secular Turkish mainstream, began to assert their difference as they never had before. The question of Alevism's origins and its relation to Islam and to Turkish culture became a highly contested issue. According to the dominant understanding, Alevism is part of the Islamic tradition, although located on its margins. It is further assumed that Alevism is intrinsically related to Anatolian and Turkish culture, carrying an ancient Turkish heritage, leading back into pre-Islamic Central Asian Turkish pasts.
Dressler argues that this knowledge about the Alevis-their demarcation as heterodox but Muslim and their status as carriers of Turkish culture-is in fact of rather recent origins. It was formulated within the complex historical dynamics of the late Ottoman Empire and the first years of the Turkish Republic in the context of Turkish nation-building and its goal of ethno-religious homogeneity.
Acknowledgements Prologue: Alevism Contested Introduction: Genealogies and Significations
Part 1: Missionaries, Nationalists, and the Kizilbas-Alevis Chapter 1: The Western Discovery of the Kizilbas-Alevis Chapter 2: Nationalism, Religion, and Inter-Communal Violence Chapter 3: Entering the Gaze of the Nationalists
Part 2: Mehmed Fuad K?pr?l? (1890-1966) and the Conceptualization of Inner-Islamic Difference Chapter 4: Nationalism, Historiography, and Politics Chapter 5: Religiography: Taxonomies of Essences and Differences Chapter 6: Alevi and Alevilik in the Work of Fuad K?pr?l? and His Legacy
Conclusion: Tropes of Difference and Sameness - The Making of Alevism as a Modernist Project Notes
Bibliography Index
Markus Dressler s work is absolutely brilliant in its critical and elaborate reading of the ways in which the Alevi identity in Turkey has been historically and politically col#(