Religious tendencies have become more visible around the world during the last two decades, moving further from the private to the public domain. Taking Turkey as a case in point, this article will explore how religious organizations have been active in developing cultural polices designed to shape the attitudes and behaviours of particular groups of people. After reflecting briefly on the significance of the historic relations between Christianity and Islam in culture-shaping activities, the article will explore the attempts of Islamic sects to influence the culture of three social groups in contemporary Turkey: youth, rural women in cities and the potential audiences of specific TV and radio channels. © 2011 Taylor & Francis.
Yazar |
Kuran-Burçoglu, N. |
Yayın Türü | Article |
Tek Biçim Adres | https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11831/5905 |
Konu Başlıkları |
Cultural policy
Implicit cultural policy Islamic sects Religion Turkey |
Koleksiyonlar |
Araştırma Çıktıları | Ön Baskı | WoS | Scopus | TR-Dizin | PubMed 02- WoS İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu 03- Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu |
Dergi Adı | International Journal of Cultural Policy |
Cild | 17 |
Dergi Sayısı | 2 |
Sayfalar | 187 - 197 |
Yayın Tarihi | 2011 |
Eser Adı [dc.title] | The impact of Islamic sects on education and the media in Turkey |
Yazar [dc.contributor.author] | Kuran-Burçoglu, N. |
Yayın Türü [dc.type] | article |
Özet [dc.description.abstract] | Religious tendencies have become more visible around the world during the last two decades, moving further from the private to the public domain. Taking Turkey as a case in point, this article will explore how religious organizations have been active in developing cultural polices designed to shape the attitudes and behaviours of particular groups of people. After reflecting briefly on the significance of the historic relations between Christianity and Islam in culture-shaping activities, the article will explore the attempts of Islamic sects to influence the culture of three social groups in contemporary Turkey: youth, rural women in cities and the potential audiences of specific TV and radio channels. © 2011 Taylor & Francis. |
Kayıt Giriş Tarihi [dc.date.accessioned] | 2020-03-18 |
Yayın Tarihi [dc.date.issued] | 2011 |
Açık Erişim Tarihi [dc.date.available] | 2020-03-18 |
Dil [dc.language.iso] | eng |
Konu Başlıkları [dc.subject] | Cultural policy |
Konu Başlıkları [dc.subject] | Implicit cultural policy |
Konu Başlıkları [dc.subject] | Islamic sects |
Konu Başlıkları [dc.subject] | Religion |
Konu Başlıkları [dc.subject] | Turkey |
Haklar [dc.rights] | info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess |
ISSN [dc.identifier.issn] | 10286632 |
Yayının ilk sayfa sayısı [dc.identifier.startpage] | 187 |
Yayının son sayfa sayısı [dc.identifier.endpage] | 197 |
Dergi Adı [dc.relation.journal] | International Journal of Cultural Policy |
Dergi Sayısı [dc.identifier.issue] | 2 |
Cild [dc.identifier.volume] | 17 |
Tek Biçim Adres [dc.identifier.uri] | https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11831/5905 |