Research Article

A Tribe is Burnt to the Ground: Reading The Legend of the Thousand Bulls as an Advocacy of Cultural Integrity

Number: 1 December 31, 2021
  • N. Buket Cengiz *
TR EN

A Tribe is Burnt to the Ground: Reading The Legend of the Thousand Bulls as an Advocacy of Cultural Integrity

Abstract

The nomads (yörüks) of Anatolia were forced to sedentarisation both during the Ottoman and the Turkish Republican eras. In today’s Anatolia, only approximately one hundred families are left who maintain their nomadic way of life: the Sarıkeçili Yörüks whose inclusion in UNESCO’s List of Intangible Cultural Heritage in Need of Urgent Safeguarding is pending. In The Legend of the Thousand Bulls [Binboğalar Efsanesi] (1971), Yaşar Kemal tells, with genuine pathos, the story of the Karaçullu, a sixty-tent pastoralist clan living in the Middle Taurus area of Southern Anatolia. Kemal depicts the Karaçullu as one of the last surviving nomadic groups of the Turkish Republic in the early 1950s and follows their quest, from one spring to the next, to find a permanent pasture upon losing their hopes of the possibility of continuing a nomadic way of life. He demonstrates the correlation between sedentarisation and the tribe’s disintegration over two axes. The first is the process from one stage of capitalism to the other as regards the ending of the nomadic way of life. The second axis is cultural integrity. Yaşar Kemal constructs the story of the tribe over the very intertwinement of the fight for existence and the fight for cultural integrity laying emphasis on the inextricable link between them. Analysing Yaşar Kemal’s emphasis on this link through the representations of nomadism in his novel as well as the connections he makes with historical events that led to the disappearance of the nomadic culture in Anatolia, I hope to contribute to cultural studies related with anthropological research on nomadism and create awareness about the situation of the last nomads of Anatolia.

Keywords

References

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Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

Anthropology

Journal Section

Research Article

Authors

N. Buket Cengiz * This is me
0000-0001-6843-6511
Türkiye

Publication Date

December 31, 2021

Submission Date

January 23, 2022

Acceptance Date

February 1, 2022

Published in Issue

Year 2021 Number: 1

APA
Cengiz, N. B. (2021). A Tribe is Burnt to the Ground: Reading The Legend of the Thousand Bulls as an Advocacy of Cultural Integrity. Istanbul Anthropological Review, 1, 87-100. https://doi.org/10.26650/IAR2021-1602
AMA
1.Cengiz NB. A Tribe is Burnt to the Ground: Reading The Legend of the Thousand Bulls as an Advocacy of Cultural Integrity. IAR. 2021;(1):87-100. doi:10.26650/IAR2021-1602
Chicago
Cengiz, N. Buket. 2021. “A Tribe Is Burnt to the Ground: Reading The Legend of the Thousand Bulls As an Advocacy of Cultural Integrity”. Istanbul Anthropological Review, no. 1: 87-100. https://doi.org/10.26650/IAR2021-1602.
EndNote
Cengiz NB (December 1, 2021) A Tribe is Burnt to the Ground: Reading The Legend of the Thousand Bulls as an Advocacy of Cultural Integrity. Istanbul Anthropological Review 1 87–100.
IEEE
[1]N. B. Cengiz, “A Tribe is Burnt to the Ground: Reading The Legend of the Thousand Bulls as an Advocacy of Cultural Integrity”, IAR, no. 1, pp. 87–100, Dec. 2021, doi: 10.26650/IAR2021-1602.
ISNAD
Cengiz, N. Buket. “A Tribe Is Burnt to the Ground: Reading The Legend of the Thousand Bulls As an Advocacy of Cultural Integrity”. Istanbul Anthropological Review. 1 (December 1, 2021): 87-100. https://doi.org/10.26650/IAR2021-1602.
JAMA
1.Cengiz NB. A Tribe is Burnt to the Ground: Reading The Legend of the Thousand Bulls as an Advocacy of Cultural Integrity. IAR. 2021;:87–100.
MLA
Cengiz, N. Buket. “A Tribe Is Burnt to the Ground: Reading The Legend of the Thousand Bulls As an Advocacy of Cultural Integrity”. Istanbul Anthropological Review, no. 1, Dec. 2021, pp. 87-100, doi:10.26650/IAR2021-1602.
Vancouver
1.N. Buket Cengiz. A Tribe is Burnt to the Ground: Reading The Legend of the Thousand Bulls as an Advocacy of Cultural Integrity. IAR. 2021 Dec. 1;(1):87-100. doi:10.26650/IAR2021-1602