Görkem Akgöz, “In the Shadow of War and Empire: Indrustrialisation, Nation Building, and Working-Class Politics in Turkey”

Authors

  • Ivana Hadjievska (Author) Younger Associate, The State Archives of Republic of North Macedonia - Department Bitola https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0992-2859

    Ivana Hadjievska is a younger associate at The Sate Archives of North Macedonia - Section in Bitola. She gained her BA (2018) and MA (2021), both in the field of history, from the Faculty of Philosophy, University “Ss. Cyril and Methodius” in Skopje. In 2019 she has received the Award for best achievement in studying from the University’s Rectorate. Her research interest includes social history, philosophy of history and remembrance culture. She currently works as a researcher on international projects concerning the accessibility of historical sources for women’s history and development of epistemic potentials of local archival collections. Most recently, she co-authored the book Invisible archives: Women in the periodicals from Vardar Macedonia between the two world wars (Center for the Study of the Nationalisms and Cultures, 2021).

https://doi.org/10.51331/B16
Görkem Akgöz, “In the Shadow of War and Empire: Indrustrialisation, Nation Building, and Working-Class Politics in Turkey”. (2025). Journal of Balkan Studies, 5(1), 171-177. https://doi.org/10.51331/B16

The subject of this review is the book by Görkem Akgöz, titled In the Shadow of War and Empire: Industrialisation, Nation-Building, and Working-Class Politics in Turkey (Brill, Leiden, 2023, xviii, 374 pp. (hardback), ISBN 978 -90-04-41674-1; Open Access (paperback), ISBN 978-90-04-68714-1). I believe that it is an important review subject, as it is a representative of the new currents in the field of labor history, where through a discursive approach to the sources testifying the human condition of the working class, new knowledge is gained about the processes of nation-building and capitalist modernization. The thematic focus in the book is on the industrialization processes in Kemalist Turkey and the impact of the etatist regime on the formation of the new civil and working-class identities. The author offers successful attempts to debunk older official historiographical narratives regarding memory and ideology about workers' lives and relations on the factory shop-floor in the period from the beginning of the 20th century to the mid-1950s.

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