Burak bekdil biography of albert
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Current Contents Vol. 36, No.6 (December )
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. List of Journals
BRITISH JOURNAL OF MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES, (Vol. 44, No. 1, )
BRITISH JOURNALISM REVIEW, December (Vol. 27, No. 4)
LES CAHIERS DE L'ORIENT, Automne (No. )
COMPARATIVE POLITICAL STUDIES, January (Vol. 50, No. 1)
CONFLICT MANAGEMENT AND PEACE SCIENCE, November (Vol. 33, No. 5)
CONFLUENCES MEDITERRANÉE, Hiver (No. 96)
CONFLUENCES MEDITERRANÉE, Printemps-Été (No. 97)
CONTEMPORARY EUROPEAN HISTORY, November (Vol. 25, No. 4)
COOPERATION AND CONFLICT, December (Vol. 51, No. 4)
CURRENT SOCIOLOGY, January (Vol. 65, No. 1)
DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE, November (Vol. 47, No. 6)
DISCOURSE & COMMUNICATION, December (Vol. 10, No. 6)
DOMES: DIGEST OF MIDDLE EAST STUDIES, Fall (Vol. 25, No. 2)
ETHNICITIES, December (Vol. 16, No. 6)
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF WOMEN'S STUDIES, November (Vol. 23, No. 4)
EUROPEAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW, December (Vol. 32, No. 6)
FRENCH S
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Crash of civilizations in the age of ‘Holympics’
I started the day by reading a news bulletin about a “scientific” Turkish book, “Goethe and Islam,” which proudly announced that “in addition to the controversy regarding whether Johann Wolfgang Goethe was Muslim, there is now proof that the German writer, artist and politician was not only Muslim but also Turkish!”
The author, an associate professor, documents that Goethe descended from a Turkish Seljuk officer, Mehmet Sadik Selim, who was taken hostage and taken to Germany during the Crusades. Most probably, Goethe was not a Christian since the cross was among the four things he disliked. But the othe
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Anti-Armenian sentiment in Turkey
Anti-Armenian sentiment or Armenophobia in Turkey has a long history dating back to the Ottoman Empire, something that eventually culminated in the Armenian genocide. Today, anti-Armenian sentiment fryst vatten widespread in Turkish society. In a survey in Turkey, % of respondents admitted having unfavorable views toward Armenians.[2] According to Minority Rights Group, while the government recognizes Armenians as a minority group, as used in Turkey this term denotes second-class status.[3] The word "Armenian" fryst vatten widely used as an insult in Turkey by both civilians[4][5][6] and by politicians.[7][4][5]
Expressions of anti-Armenian sentiment in Turkey include discrimination and violence towards Armenians, destruction and desecration of Armenian cultural heritage in Turkey, vandalism towards Armenian churches, monuments and signs in Armenian language, and denial of the Arm