The ambivalent role of national monuments in the age of globalisation: The case of Atatürk's mausoleum in Turkey

TitleThe ambivalent role of national monuments in the age of globalisation: The case of Atatürk's mausoleum in Turkey
Publication TypeJournal Article
AuthorsAkcali, Emel
Journal titleBorderlands
Year2010
Volume9
Issue2
AbstractIt is argued that national landmarks play an increasingly ambivalent role in relation to the state project in the age of globalization, since states are less and less interested in architecture for the purpose of nation-building. Despite this phenomenon, daily visits to Anıtkabir, the last resting place of the founder of the Republic of Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, located in Ankara, the capital of Turkey, have recently started to set all time high records. It is usually suspected that such development is due to the recent manipulation of the monument by secular and pro-republican political actors as a site of protest and dissent against globalization and the (trans-)formative policies of the secular nation-state structure of Turkey. Drawing upon the politics of performing memory observed during two field trips to the site and inperson individual interviews conducted with its visitors, I argue that such interpretation would be too simple a way out of the conundrum concerning Anıtkabir’s still privileged role in shaping collective memories in Turkey. I suggest instead that Anıtkabir, as one of the most important landmarks of the Republic of Turkey, continues, aesthetically, to arouse the public imagination in Turkey in the context of the ongoing nation building and re-building process.
LanguageEnglish
Publisher linkhttp://www.borderlands.net.au/vol9no2_2010/akcali_ataturk.pdf
File attachment: