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SA Graduate Defence - Efe Peker

March 04, 2016

Efe Peker, a PhD candidate in Sociology, will be defending his Dissertation entitled:

A Comparative-Historical Sociology of Secularisation: Republican State Building in France (1875-1905) and Turkey (1908-1938)

The Doctoral Dissertation defence will take place on Friday March 11, 2016 at 8:00 a.m. (PST)  in the West Mall Complex, Room 2522 on the Burnaby Campus.

Abstract

This dissertation features a comparative-historical examination of macrosocietal secularisation in France (1875-1905) and Turkey (1908-1938), with particular attention to their republican state building experiences. Bridging the literatures on secularisation theory (sociology of religion) and state formation (comparative-historical sociology), it is the purpose of this work to contribute to 鈥渉istoricising the secularisation debate鈥 by scrutinising the 鈥渟ociopolitical conflicts鈥 involved in the making of macro-level secularisation (Gorski, 2003b, 2005). The existing literature often interprets different patterns of secularisation through voluntaristic perspectives (overemphasising the ideologies/beliefs of rulers and individuals) or deterministic lenses (anticipating civilisational or modernist path dependencies). To overcome the duality, this study provides a comparative-historical approach that investigates secularisation as a non-linear, uneven, and dialectical process contingent upon the course of sociopolitical struggles and structural transformations.

Differing from many other national states, why did France and Turkey converge to embrace secularism as a central principle and doctrine, based on an accentuated form of 鈥渟eparation鈥 from and 鈥渞egulation鈥 of religion? What accounts for their divergence, that is, why did the 鈥渟eparation鈥 aspect prove more dominant in French 濒补茂肠颈迟茅, whereas 鈥渞egulation鈥 came to be prominent in Turkish laiklik? Resting on a rich array of archival and bibliographical sources, my analysis proposes to explain the convergence and divergence between France and Turkey through the interaction of 鈥渆xtra-religious鈥 and 鈥渞eligious鈥 sets of variables. The former set takes into account geographically specific class struggles/alliances, and dynamics of internal/external sovereign state building. The latter set explores the doctrinal/institutional configuration of dominant religions, and the situation of religious minorities. Highlighting the interplay of these 鈥渆xtra-religious鈥 and 鈥渞eligious鈥 dynamics, the dissertation offers an analytical framework to contribute to the social scientific understanding of secularisation/desecularisation beyond the French and Turkish cases.

The highly contentious histories of France and Turkey reveal that secularisation is not merely about the conflict of ideational visions. Secularisation is also a concrete state building strategy operationalised through a combination of 鈥渟eparation鈥 and 鈥渞egulation鈥. As part of the struggle against religiously affiliated/legitimated sociopolitical contenders, these dual strategies are utilised by bourgeois-national state builders to bring about 鈥渄ifferentiation鈥, 鈥渟ocietalisation鈥, and 鈥渞ationalisation鈥 (Wallis & Bruce, 1992). While the strategy of separation 鈥渄ifferentiates鈥 (and transfers to the state) diverse social functions previously assumed by 鈥渞eligious authority鈥 (Chaves, 1994), the latter鈥檚 remaining prerogatives are placed under the regulation of 鈥渟ocietally鈥 and 鈥渞ationally鈥 organised secular-bureaucratic institutions. In this sense, secularisation is intimately linked to the consolidation of sovereign infrastructural power (Mann, 1984; Soifer, 2008) in 鈥渓egal-institutional鈥, 鈥渟ocio-educational鈥, 鈥渟ymbolic-ideological鈥, and 鈥減roperty-distributional鈥 spheres. France and Turkey allow for a cross-religious and cross-regional comparison to crystallise the national and extra-national social forces and mechanisms that influence the ebbs and flows in the secularising process.

The members serving in Efe Peker's Examining Committee are:

Chair: Dr. Wendy Chan, Professor, Sociology
Senior Supervisor:
Dr. Gary Teeple, Professor, Sociology
Co-Senior Supervisor:
Dr. Patrick Weil, Professor, Center of Social History of the 20th century (Centre d鈥橦istoire Sociale du 20猫me Si猫cle),  Universit茅 Paris I - Panth茅on-Sorbonne
Committee Member:
Dr. Gerardo Otero, Professor,  School for International Studies, Associate Member Sociology
External Examiner:
Dr. Rita Hermon-Belot, Professor, Department of History at EHESS (脡cole des hautes 茅tudes en sciences sociales / The School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences), Universit茅 Paris I - Panth茅on-Sorbonne
External Examiner:
Dr. Gilles Dorronsoro, Professor,  Political Science, Universit茅 Paris I - Panth茅on-Sorbonne
External Examiner:
Dr. Philip Gorski, Professor, Department of Sociology, Yale University

Everyone is welcome to attend!