How can a piece of flatbread (lahmacun) ignite a culture war? Why is a TV show about the Ottoman past less about the 16th century and more about the cultural conflicts of today? What does a Brazilian soccer star’s passport reveal about the boundaries of being Turkish? In contemporary Türkiye, the grandest social forces—modernization, nationalism, and religious revival—are not abstract currents but are lived, breathed, and contested in the most intimate corners of everyday life.
In this book, the author takes readers on an unconventional journey through the symbolic playgrounds of modern Türkiye, using eleven key “junctions”—from a mafia assassin’s bullet and a telephone scam to a pop diva’s identity—to map the nation’s cultural and moral fault lines. The book moves beyond simple binaries of East vs. West or secular vs. religious to reveal a far more complex and interesting reality.
At the heart of this analysis is the 40/30/30 rule, a groundbreaking new framework for understanding the surprising alliances that define Turkish politics. The author argues that a powerful Moral Bloc unites different segments of the population, demonstrating a fundamental truth of the nation’s public life: morality ultimately trumps culture. For anyone seeking to understand the deep structures of power, identity, and meaning that shape modern Türkiye, this book is an essential and compelling guide.
