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Turkish Rural Lifestyle Migrants to Muğla: A Qualitative Analysis of Video Narratives

Year 2022, Volume: 31 Issue: 2, 305 - 319, 18.12.2022
https://doi.org/10.51800/ecd.1124245

Abstract

Bu makalede, Türkiye'de büyük şehirlerden kırsala göç YouTube platformunda yayınlanan göç hikâyelerinin içerik analizine dayalı olarak, Muğla ili örneğinde, yaşam tarzı göçü yaklaşımıyla ele alınmıştır. Araştırma sonuçları, büyük şehirlerde ağırlıklı olarak özel sektörde çalışan ve çoğu otuzlu yaşlarda olan bir grup insanın yeni bir hayata başlamak için işlerini bırakıp, kırsala göç ettiğini göstermiştir. Söz konusu göçmenlerin çoğu büyük şehirlerin istenmeyen koşullarından, şehir hayatının getirdiği olumsuz duygulardan ve yoğun iş baskısından kaçmakta ve Ege kıyılarının kırsal kesimlerinde doğa ve üretim merkezli bir yaşam aramaktadır. Sonuçlar, Covid-19'un da yeni bir motivasyon kaynağı olarak ortaya çıktığını göstermiştir. Kentin aksine, kırsalın olumlu özellikleri, özellikle bahçeli müstakil bir evde yaşama imkânı, kırsal alanların var olan olumlu imajını daha da güçlendirmiştir. Kırsal alanlar, sokağa çıkma yasağı durumunda özel bahçeleri sayesinde açık hava etkinliklerini ve maskesiz bir günlük yaşamı mümkün kıldığı için daha güvenli ve konforlu yerler olarak görülmektedir. Dolayısıyla, büyük şehirlerden kırsal alanlara göçün, pandemi ile daha da popüler bir eğilim haline geldiği söylenebilir.

References

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  • Åkerlund, U., & Sandberg, L. (2015). Stories of lifestyle mobility: representing self and place in the search for the ‘good life’. Social & Cultural Geography, 16(3), 351-370. doi: 10.1080/14649365.2014.987806.
  • Bahar, O. (2008). Muğla turizminin türkiye ekonomisi açısından yeri ve önemi. Muğla Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Dergisi, 2, 61-80.
  • Başaran-Uysal, A., & Sakarya, İ. (2012). Kırsal soylulaştırma ve turizmin kırsal yerleşimlere etkileri: Adatepe ve Yeşilyurt köyleri. Paper presented at Dünya Şehircilik Günü 36. Kolokyumu, Ankara, November 8.
  • Başaran-Uysal, A. (2017). Kırsalda koruma ve soylulaştırma ikilemi. Ege Mimarlık 2, 36-39. Retrieved from http://egemimarlik.org/96/6.pdf.
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  • Benson, M. (2011a). The British in rural France lifestyle migration and the ongoing guest for a better way of life (first edition). Manchester University Press.
  • Benson, M. (2011b). The movement beyond (lifestyle) migration: mobile practices and the constitution of a better way of life. Mobilities, 6(2): 221-235. https://doi.org/10.1080/17450101.2011.552901.
  • Benson, M., & O’Reilly, K. (2016). From lifestyle migration to lifestyle in migration: categories, concepts and ways of thinking. Migration Studies, 4(1): 20-37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/migration/mnv015
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  • Halfacree K. (2014). Jumping up from the armchair: beyond the idyll in counterurbanisation. In Benson M., & Osbaldiston (Eds.) Understanding lifestyle migration. migration, diasporas and citizenship series. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Halliday, J., & Coombest, M. (1995). In search of counterurbanisation: some evidence from Devon on the relationship between patterns of migration and motivation. Journal of Rural Studies, 11(4), 433-446. doi: 10.1016/0743-0167(95)00032-1.
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  • Jobes, P. C. (2000). Moving nearer to heaven: the illusions and disillusions of migrants to scenic rural places. Praeger.
  • Jones, R.E., Fly, J.M., Talley, J., & Cordell, H. K. (2003). Green migration into rural America: the new frontier of environmentalism? Society &Natural Resources, 16(3), 221-238. 10.1080/08941920309159
  • King, R., Cela, E., Fokkema, T., & Morettini, G. (2021). International retirement and later-life migrants in the Marche region, Italy: materialities of landscape, ‘home’, lifestyle and consumption. Ageing and Society, 41(6), 1267-1288. doi:10.1017/S0144686X20001233
  • Kozinets, R.V. (2006). Click to connect: Netnography and tribal advertising. Journal of Advertising, 46(3), 279-288. doi:10.2501/S0021849906060338
  • Kozinets, R.V., Pierre-Yann, D., & Amanda, E. (2014). Netnographic analysis: understanding culture through social media data. In Uwe F (Ed.), Sage handbook of qualitative data analysis (262-275). Sage.
  • Kozinets, R.V. (2015). Netnography: understanding networked communication society. In Anabel QH & Luke S (Eds.), The international encyclopedia of digital communication and society.
  • Korpela, M. (2019). Searching for a countercultural life abroad: neo-nomadism, lifestyle mobility or bohemian lifestyle migration? Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 46(15), 3352 3369.Doi:10.1080/1369183X.2019.1569505.
  • Krivokapic-Skoko, B., & Collins, J. (2016) looking for rural idyll ‘down under’: international immigrants in rural Australia. International Migration, 54 (1), 167-179. https://doi.org/10.1111/imig.12174.
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  • Osbaldiston, N., Picken, F., & Denny, L. (2020). exploring emotional reflexivity in British lifestyle migration to Australia. Population Space Place, 26(5), https://doi.org/10. 1002/psp.2328
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Turkish Rural Lifestyle Migrants to Muğla: A Qualitative Analysis of Video Narratives

Year 2022, Volume: 31 Issue: 2, 305 - 319, 18.12.2022
https://doi.org/10.51800/ecd.1124245

Abstract

This article focuses on migration from big cities to the countryside in Turkey, in the case of Muğla province with a lifestyle migration lens, based on content analysis of the stories of migrants posted on the YouTube platform that provides a basis to increase digital migration research. Research results showed that a group of people who were mainly earlier in their life cycle and worked in the private sector in the big cities quitted their jobs to start a new life in the countryside. Most of them escape from the disliked characteristics of big cities, negative emotions caused by urban life and intense work pressure. They are in search of natural and production-centred life in rural areas of the Turkish Aegean. The results indicated that Covid-19 also emerged as a recent motivator. Contrary to the city, favourable features of the countryside, especially the possibility of living in a detached house with a garden, strengthened the positive image of the rural areas. They are seen as safer and more comfortable locations because in the case of a curfew, outdoor activities and a mask-free daily life would be possible due to the private gardens. Migration from big cities to rural areas seems to become a more popular trend with the pandemic.

References

  • Åkerlund, U. (2013). The best of both worlds: aspirations, drivers and practices of Swedish lifestyle movers in Malta. PhD diss., Umeå University.
  • Åkerlund, U., & Sandberg, L. (2015). Stories of lifestyle mobility: representing self and place in the search for the ‘good life’. Social & Cultural Geography, 16(3), 351-370. doi: 10.1080/14649365.2014.987806.
  • Bahar, O. (2008). Muğla turizminin türkiye ekonomisi açısından yeri ve önemi. Muğla Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Dergisi, 2, 61-80.
  • Başaran-Uysal, A., & Sakarya, İ. (2012). Kırsal soylulaştırma ve turizmin kırsal yerleşimlere etkileri: Adatepe ve Yeşilyurt köyleri. Paper presented at Dünya Şehircilik Günü 36. Kolokyumu, Ankara, November 8.
  • Başaran-Uysal, A. (2017). Kırsalda koruma ve soylulaştırma ikilemi. Ege Mimarlık 2, 36-39. Retrieved from http://egemimarlik.org/96/6.pdf.
  • Benson, M., & O’Reilly, K. 2009. Migration and the search for a better way of life: a critical exploration of lifestyle migration. The Sociological Review 57(4), 608-625. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-954X.2009.01864.x
  • Benson, M. (2011a). The British in rural France lifestyle migration and the ongoing guest for a better way of life (first edition). Manchester University Press.
  • Benson, M. (2011b). The movement beyond (lifestyle) migration: mobile practices and the constitution of a better way of life. Mobilities, 6(2): 221-235. https://doi.org/10.1080/17450101.2011.552901.
  • Benson, M., & O’Reilly, K. (2016). From lifestyle migration to lifestyle in migration: categories, concepts and ways of thinking. Migration Studies, 4(1): 20-37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/migration/mnv015
  • Berry, B.J.L. (1976). The counter-urbanization process: urban America since 1970. Urban Affairs Annual Review, 11,17-30.
  • Bijker, R. A., & Haartsen, T. (2012). More than counter-urbanisation: migration to popular and less-popular rural areas in the Netherlands. Population Space and Place, 18(5), 643-657. https://doi.org/10.1002/psp.687
  • Buller, H., & Hoggart, K. (1994). International counter-urbanization: British migrants in rural France (first edition). Avebury.
  • Budan, P. (2015). The impasse of urban to rural migration: re-enchantment and disillusionment in Şirince. Master diss., Sabancı University. İstanbul.
  • Braun, V., & Clarke, V. (2006). Using thematic analysis in psychology. Qualitative Research in Psychology, 3(2):77-101.
  • Camarero, L.A., & Oliva, J. (2002). Urban sprawl, rural turnaround and the changing shape of utopia. Paper presented at Xıııth World Congress of the International Economic History, Buenos Aires.
  • Cresswell, T. (2009). “Place”. In R. Kitchin & N. J. Thrift (Eds.) International encyclopedia of human geography, Elsevier.
  • Deniz, A., & Şahin, S. S. (2022). Locked at home and escape from home: transformation of older women's daily life during the Covıd 19 Pandemic. In Südaş, İ., Çağın, Ş., & Maktal-Canko, D. (Eds.), Perspectıves In Gender Studıes Space & History & Art, (1-16). Ege University Publications.
  • Eimermann, M., Lundmark, M., & Muller, D.K. (2012). Exploring Dutch migration to rural Sweden: international counter-urbanisation in the Eu”. Tijdschrift Voor Economische En Sociale Geografie, 103(3): 330-346. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9663.2011.00696.x
  • Eimermann, M. (2015). Lifestyle migration to the north: dutch families and the decision to move to rural Sweden. Popul. Space Place, 21(1), 68-85. https://doi.org/10.1002/psp.1807
  • Ermiş, S. (2022). Profili, motivasyonu ve yer seçimi bakımından yaşlı göçleri: Datça (Muğla) örneği. Master dissertation, Süleyman Demirel University. Isparta
  • Gaspar, S. (2015). In search of the rural idyll: lifestyle migrants across the EU”. In Torkington, K., David, I., Sardinha, J. (Eds.), Practising the goodlife – lifestyle migration in practices (14-32). Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
  • Griffiths, D., & Maile, S. (2014) Britons in berlin: imagined cityscapes, affective encounters and the cultivation of the self. In Michaela Benson & Nick Osbaldiston (Eds.), Understanding lifestyle migration: theoretical approaches to migration and the quest for a better way of life (139-162). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Halfacree, K. (2006). From dropping out to leading on? british counter-cultural back-to the-land in a changing rurality. Progress in Human Geography, 30(3), 309-336. https://doi.org/10.1191/0309132506ph609oa
  • Halfacree, K. (2007). Back-to-the-land in the twenty-first century-making connections with rurality. Tijdschrift Voor Economische En Sociale Geografie, 98(1), 3-8. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9663.2007.00371.x
  • Halfacree, K. H, & Rivera, M. J. (2012). moving to the countryside ... and staying: lives beyond representations. Sociologia Ruralis, 52 (1). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9523.2011.00556.x
  • Halfacree K. (2014). Jumping up from the armchair: beyond the idyll in counterurbanisation. In Benson M., & Osbaldiston (Eds.) Understanding lifestyle migration. migration, diasporas and citizenship series. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Halliday, J., & Coombest, M. (1995). In search of counterurbanisation: some evidence from Devon on the relationship between patterns of migration and motivation. Journal of Rural Studies, 11(4), 433-446. doi: 10.1016/0743-0167(95)00032-1.
  • Hedberg, C., & Haandrikman, K. (2014). Repopulation of the Swedish countryside: globalisation by international migration. Journal of Rural Studies, 34, 128-138. doi:10.1016/j.jrurstud.2014.01.005
  • Jobes, P. C. (2000). Moving nearer to heaven: the illusions and disillusions of migrants to scenic rural places. Praeger.
  • Jones, R.E., Fly, J.M., Talley, J., & Cordell, H. K. (2003). Green migration into rural America: the new frontier of environmentalism? Society &Natural Resources, 16(3), 221-238. 10.1080/08941920309159
  • King, R., Cela, E., Fokkema, T., & Morettini, G. (2021). International retirement and later-life migrants in the Marche region, Italy: materialities of landscape, ‘home’, lifestyle and consumption. Ageing and Society, 41(6), 1267-1288. doi:10.1017/S0144686X20001233
  • Kozinets, R.V. (2006). Click to connect: Netnography and tribal advertising. Journal of Advertising, 46(3), 279-288. doi:10.2501/S0021849906060338
  • Kozinets, R.V., Pierre-Yann, D., & Amanda, E. (2014). Netnographic analysis: understanding culture through social media data. In Uwe F (Ed.), Sage handbook of qualitative data analysis (262-275). Sage.
  • Kozinets, R.V. (2015). Netnography: understanding networked communication society. In Anabel QH & Luke S (Eds.), The international encyclopedia of digital communication and society.
  • Korpela, M. (2019). Searching for a countercultural life abroad: neo-nomadism, lifestyle mobility or bohemian lifestyle migration? Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 46(15), 3352 3369.Doi:10.1080/1369183X.2019.1569505.
  • Krivokapic-Skoko, B., & Collins, J. (2016) looking for rural idyll ‘down under’: international immigrants in rural Australia. International Migration, 54 (1), 167-179. https://doi.org/10.1111/imig.12174.
  • Krippendorff, K. (2018). Content analysis: an introduction to its methodology. Sage.
  • Leebrick, R.A. (2015). Environmental gentrification and development in a rural Appalachian community: blending critical theory and ethnography. Doctoral diss., University of Tennessee.
  • Leurs K., M. Prabhakar. (2018). Doing digital migration studies: methodological considerations for an emerging research focus. In Zapata-Barrero R., & Yalaz E (Eds.), qualitative research in European migration studies (247-266). Springer.
  • Lee, E. S. (1966). A Theory of Migration. Demography 3(1), 47-57.
  • Matthews, H., Taylor, M., Sherwood, K., Tucker, F. Limb, M. (2000). Growing-up in the countryside: children and the rural idyll. Journal of Rural Studies 16, 141-153. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0743-0167(99)00059-5.
  • Mirza-Baş, S. (2019). Yeni bir göç modeli olarak kentten tersine göç: İstanbul incelemesi. Master diss., Muğla Sıtkı Koçman Üniversitesi.
  • Osbaldiston, N. 2011. The authentic place in the amenity migration discourse. Space and Culture, 14(2), 214-226. https://doi.org/10.1177/1206331210392700.
  • Osbaldiston, N., Picken, F., & Denny, L. (2020). exploring emotional reflexivity in British lifestyle migration to Australia. Population Space Place, 26(5), https://doi.org/10. 1002/psp.2328
  • O' Reilly, K. (2007). Emerging tourism futures: residential tourism and its implications. In Geoffroy, C. & Sibley, R. (Eds.), Going abroad: travel, tourism, and migration. cross-cultural perspectives on mobility (144-157). Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
  • Özadak, A. (2016). Köye geri dönüş”: Türkiye’deki ekolojik çiftliklerde birlikte yaşam deneyimleri ve yeni köylülük. Master diss., İstanbul Bilgi Üniversitesi. İstanbul.
  • Özkan, O. (2019). Emekli göçmenlerin yaşadıkları yöreye ilişkin mekânsal algıları: Kaz Dağı Milli Parkı Çevresi (Balıkesir) Örneği. Master diss., Balıkesir Universitesi. Balıkesir.
  • Rivera-Escribano, M. J. (2007). Migration to rural Navarre: questioning the experience of counter-urbanisation. Tijdschrift Voor Economische En Sociale Geografie, 98(1), 32-41. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9663.2007.00374.x
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There are 62 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Human Geography
Journal Section Research Articles
Authors

Bahar Kaba 0000-0001-9729-8605

Publication Date December 18, 2022
Submission Date May 31, 2022
Acceptance Date November 23, 2022
Published in Issue Year 2022 Volume: 31 Issue: 2

Cite

APA Kaba, B. (2022). Turkish Rural Lifestyle Migrants to Muğla: A Qualitative Analysis of Video Narratives. Ege Coğrafya Dergisi, 31(2), 305-319. https://doi.org/10.51800/ecd.1124245