The Turkish Alphabet Reform and the Alevi Tradition
The End of a Manuscript Culture?
2021–2022 and 2024
FNT06
This project investigates how the manuscript culture that existed among Alevi communities in rural Anatolia transformed within the context of widespread literacy and the printed word. Particular attention is paid to changes linked with reforms in the late Ottoman Empire and in the early Republic of Turkey. Based on specific cases, the project analyses how the availability of mass-produced stationery or the Turkish alphabet reform from Perso-Arabic to Latin characters, for example, impacted on manuscript production in Alevi villages. Furthermore, it examines developments connected with manuscript use that began once the handwritten tradition died out in the 1950s.
People
Project lead: Raoul Motika
Research Associate: Janina Karolewski