'Mother Bring the Henna': Kına Gecesi and Fragmented Imaginations of the Nation-state

dc.contributor.advisorTracey Heatherington
dc.contributor.committeememberErica Bornstein
dc.contributor.committeememberCaroline Seymour-Jorn
dc.creatorFrankel, Alexandra Catrina Vieux
dc.date.accessioned2025-01-16T18:02:54Z
dc.date.issued2017-05-01
dc.description.abstractThis research articulates kına gecesi (henna night) as a critical site for the production and reproduction of gendered politics in Turkey. Kına gecesi, as a women’s pre-wedding ritual, is situated at the margins of civil wedding ceremonies, and thereby intersects with wedding’s politicization in pronatalist discourses. Tropes of fertility in this ritual in concert with its proximity to marriage show it to be salient to biological, cultural, and national reproduction. I argue that women’s discourses on kına gecesi engender frangemented imaginations of the nation-state. This notion of fragmentation follows Dipesh Chakrabarty’s understanding of “provincializing” which advocates direct translation of experience rather than filtering it through abstract universals. Discourses on kına gecesi can thereby be understood to respond to and engage with different imaginations of the nation-state, and thus fragment it. Importantly, these narratives rely on affective attributions to kına gecesi, which underlie affective relationships with nation-state and place. During the period of research increasingly characterized by political unrest, political anxieties about the future of the nation permeated narratives of kına gecesi. In this way, fragmented imaginations of the nation-state as expressed in these narratives demonstrate different anxieties in different places. Kına gecesi was then not only a ritual event, but also a medium through which to articulate affective relationships with the nation-state.
dc.description.embargo2019-05-31
dc.embargo.liftdate2019-05-31
dc.identifier.urihttp://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/85793
dc.relation.replaceshttps://dc.uwm.edu/etd/1470
dc.subjectAffect
dc.subjectGender
dc.subjectNationalism
dc.subjectPostcolonialism
dc.subjectSubjectivity
dc.subjectTurkey
dc.title'Mother Bring the Henna': Kına Gecesi and Fragmented Imaginations of the Nation-state
dc.typethesis
thesis.degree.disciplineAnthropology
thesis.degree.grantorUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
thesis.degree.nameMaster of Science

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