Memory, Narrative, and Collective Gendering of Identity: Revolutionary Women in Turkey

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Abstract

This article examines the construction of gendered collective identity among leftist women in Turkey through their post-1980 coup prison memory. By analyzing 124 autobiographical narratives, we uncover a process of identity formation grounded in a continuous negotiation between past struggles and present concerns, constituting a counternarrative that challenges the master narrative of defeat and submission prevalent after the coup. The article's tripartite framework of distance, substance, and persistence underscores women's journey from marginalization to collective empowerment, producing shifting subject positions across time. By placing temporality at the center of collective identity formation, this study contributes to feminist memory literature and identity studies while addressing a significant historiographical gap by bringing the neglected struggles of leftist women in Turkey to light.

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Collective Memory, Narratives, Gender Identity, 1980 Coup, Leftist Women Prisoners

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