Scholar describes how secular Turkey handled its clothing issue.

Byline: Shazia Hasan

KARACHI -- How and why a certain type of clothing came to symbolise the new secular Turkish national identity, and how this identity and the symbolic importance of dress associated with it have continued to shape the main parameters of political debates in modern Turkey was at the heart of Dr Sevgi Adak's lecture on 'Dressing the nation: clothing reforms and the secular national identity in Turkey' at the Aga Khan University on Wednesday.

Part of the Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations Lecture Series, Dr Adak's talk looked at two main interventions, namely the anti-veiling campaigns and the reform of religious clothing in the early Turkish Republic as clothing has been one of the most contested issues in modern Turkey, especially after the establishment of the republic in 1923 when dress codes became the battleground on which various actors came to debate the issues of religion, modernisation, secularism and gender roles in Turkish society.

Thereafter followed various anti-veiling campaigns. To research them, Dr Adak turned to Turkish newspaper archives that had records of such campaigns in some 62 cities of Turkey, including Trabzon, Eskisehir, Mugla, Rize, Mersin and Aydin. During the main wave of these campaigns in the 1930s there were also bans imposed on the pece (veil) and the carsaf (head to toe robe-like dress) to which many women responded with disobedience and open resistance, by avoiding the ban or hiding from the public eye as they went ahead with wearing their dress of choice.

'In the 1930s, many women resisted bans on veil and carsaf'

Likewise, there were others who complied and happily embraced change.

'They used patriarchal pressure, they indulged in gossip about those who adapted to modern wear and against the government's pushing for the undesired choice of attire, either they excluded themselves from social life and hid or they verbally assaulted or harassed those who wore the kind of clothes the government wanted them to wear,' she said. 'Meanwhile, those who complied with modernity removed their veils and robes to opt for Western clothes...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT