‘Saying sorry’ in Turkey

Author: Efe Ibrahim   Forchtner Bernhard  

Publisher: John Benjamins Publishing Company

E-ISSN: 1569-9862|14|2|233-257

ISSN: 1569-2159

Source: Journal of Language and Politics, Vol.14, Iss.2, 2015-01, pp. : 233-257

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Abstract

Dominant self-complacent national narratives (not only) in Turkey have long silenced past wrongdoings. Among these, the massacre of thousands of Kurds in Dersim during the 1930s, being part of the wider suppression of the Kurdish minority until the present day, is a particularly significant example. However, against the background of an almost global emphasis on recognising past crimes, the Turkish Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, offered an apology on 23 November 2011. Erdoğan’s unexpected move has been both viewed as an opportunity for a more inclusive understanding of Turkish citizenship, as well as criticised for being a calculated manoeuvre in order to sideline political opponents. In this article, we investigate both this performance and its public reception. Drawing on the discourse-historical approach to critical discourse analysis, we ultimately illustrate how Erdoğan instrumentalised an ‘apology’ for political gain.