More Eurovision
Sunday, May 25th, 2003 01:40 amNow we've won the Eurovision song contest, will they let us into the European Union?
(just noticed that I'm using "we" to mean Turkey, not the UK, which is just as well, considering)
(just noticed that I'm using "we" to mean Turkey, not the UK, which is just as well, considering)
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Date: 2003-05-24 03:40 pm (UTC)şarkı neydi !!?? aaa çok sevindim :))
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Date: 2003-05-24 03:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-05-24 04:07 pm (UTC)Birileri Türkiye'yi sevdiğinden bahsedince aklıma hep Ali Sami Yen'de yabancı takımlar için asılan pankartlar bayraklar geliyor:)
and the aswer is: No.
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Date: 2003-05-24 11:27 pm (UTC)"amaaaaaan petrol caniiiim petrol..."
evet onlara bakinca daha iyi duruyor tabii ki.
Bence "evri vey det ay ken" de korkunc bir sarki; sanirim sertab da bunun farkindadir. yani umarim. boyle "dogu-bati" sentezi yapacam diye iki tane oryantal dans yapip ingilizce pop soylemiyorlar mi sinir oluyorum.
bence asil turk sarkisi dedigin, yani oyle bir sey varsa ve bunun en iyi ornegi aranirsa, benim icin kesinlikle:
isik dogudan yukselir --- sezen aksu.
iste bak o albumle gercekten gurur duyuyorum ben.
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I'm absolutely not against it, I'm just wondering.
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Date: 2003-05-25 03:34 am (UTC)I hear they're planning on having a kid. Let's hope it inherits Sertab's voice and Demir's guitar playing skills, not the other way round.
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Date: 2003-05-25 04:08 am (UTC)Physically, only a tiny part of Turkey is in Europe. Culturally, Turkey is very mixed, with some ethnic groups (e.g. Kurds) being very far from Europe, but the overall culture could be described as Mediterranean more than Middle Eastern. Imagine a bunch of Greeks or Italians who converted to Islam, and you pretty much have Turks.
Politically and economically, Turkey is definitely in the European camp. It doesn't always live up to its ideals of democracy and secularism, but at least they are acknowledged as ideals. When religious conservatives want to increase the role of religion, they do so using the rhetoric of democracy; when the political conservatives want to cut corners on human rights, they say it's necessary to preserve secularism.
*lol* I like the last sentence
It's a bit ironic though, because European identity defined itself in part as opposition to Turkish empire (and everything Asian and non-Christian).
Re: *lol* I like the last sentence
Date: 2003-05-25 12:20 pm (UTC)However, in terms of classical culture, the Eastern Mediterranean was pretty much one block, and the Eastern border of the Roman Empire coincided with the Eastern border of Turkey. By that reckoning, anywhere you can find Greek columns is European.
Of course the real division in Europe is what a British politician called "the olive belt". That's why Italians have more in common with Turks than they do with Danes (olives, dangerous grapeseed spirits, piety mixed with promiscuity, political corruption, a love of bureaucracy combined with a loathing of efficiency, and of course that strange mixture of machismo and matriarchy).
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Date: 2003-05-25 12:52 pm (UTC)Congratulations! :)
Boundaries
Fine, so at least Prague was included, what a relief. :-) My mother used to say, jokingly of course, that Central Europe ends in Zilina, a town in Western Slovakia, the rest is Balkan.
(The question of European-ness has become very topical to everyone and interesting to me lately.)
Re: Boundaries
Date: 2003-05-25 01:20 pm (UTC)Incidentally, "defenestration" is one of my favourite words - I use it to mean "removing Windows from a computer."
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Date: 2003-05-30 09:06 am (UTC)