Abstract
May 2013 saw Istanbul witness a massive public demonstration. The incident began on 28 May when a small group of environmental activists tried to save Gezi Park, one of the most iconic green spaces in the Taksim district of central Istanbul. The park dates back to the 1940s and is well-known as public promenade. The modest demonstration was triggered by a government decision to reconstruct a former Ottoman Artillery Barracks. Within a few days, it developed into a violent uprising on an unprecedented scale lasting almost an entire month. Crowds not only gathered in Istanbul but also in many other Turkish cities such as the capital, Ankara. International media broadcast the protests live from Taksim Square turning the Gezi Park protest into an international phenomenon. Today the Park has become a reference point in Turkish politics where almost every issue is linked to the ‘spirit of Gezi’. It made a modest protest over an inner city promenade into a vivid symbol of political opposition. This paper will analyse historically the Taksim Square project and the ideological conflicts it evoked in Turkish society.
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Notes on contributors
Murat Gül
MURAT GÜL
Dr, Associate Professor, Department of Architecture, TOBB University of Economics and Technology, Söğütözü Caddesi No. 43, Ankara, Turkey. E-mail: [email protected]
Murat Gül is an architectural and urban historian and the author of The Emergence of Modern Istanbul: Transformation and Modernisation of a City (London: 2009) and co-author of Istanbul Architecture (Boorowa: 2013).
John Dee
JOHN DEE
Dr, Senior Lecturer, Architecture Program, International University of Sarajevo, Hrasnicka cesta 15, 71210 Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. E-mail: [email protected]
John Dee is an urban planner with research interests in urban planning theory, urban history, heritage conser vation and environmental impact assessment.
Cahide Nur Cünük
CAHIDE NUR CÜNÜK
PhD Candidate at Fatih Sultan Mehmet VakIf University, Merkez Efendi Mah. Mevlevihane Cad., YenikapI Mevlevihanesi No: 25, Zeytinburnu, Istanbul, Turkey.
E-mail: [email protected]
Research interests are in architectural and urban history, urban sociology.