Read Beyond Anitkabir The Funerary Architecture of Atatürk The Construction and Maintenance of National Memory (Ashgate Studies in Architecture)

[Download PDF.viu4] Beyond Anitkabir The Funerary Architecture of Atatürk The Construction and Maintenance of National Memory (Ashgate Studies in Architecture)



[Download PDF.viu4] Beyond Anitkabir The Funerary Architecture of Atatürk The Construction and Maintenance of National Memory (Ashgate Studies in Architecture)

[Download PDF.viu4] Beyond Anitkabir The Funerary Architecture of Atatürk The Construction and Maintenance of National Memory (Ashgate Studies in Architecture)

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[Download PDF.viu4] Beyond Anitkabir The Funerary Architecture of Atatürk The Construction and Maintenance of National Memory (Ashgate Studies in Architecture)

There have been five different settings that at one time or another have contained the dead body of Mustafa Kemal Atatrk, organizer of the Turkish War of Independence (1919-1923) and first president of the Republic of Turkey. Narrating the story of these different architectural constructions - the bedroom in Dolmabahe Palace, Istanbul, where he died; a temporary catafalque in this same palace; his funeral stage in Turkeys new capital Ankara; a temporary tomb in the Ankara Ethnographic Museum; and his permanent and monumental mausoleum in Ankara, known in Turkish as Anitkabir (Memorial Tomb) - this book also describes and interprets the movement of Atatrks body through the cities of Istanbul and Ankara and also the nation of Turkey to reach these destinations. It examines how each one of these locations - accidental, designed, temporary, permanent - has contributed in its own way to the construction of a Turkish national memory about Atatrk. Lastly, the two permanent constructions - the Dolmabahe Palace bedroom and Anitkabir - have changed in many ways since their first appearance in order to maintain this national memory. These changes are exposed to reveal a dynamic, rather than dull, impression of funerary architecture.
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