2023 Conference: The Afterlives of Lausanne: Society, Politics, and Belonging After Empire
May 26-27, 2023
Northwestern University Evanston Campus, Harris Hall, Room 108
Each year, the Keyman Modern Turkish Studies Program brings together scholars from around the world to discuss some of the most pressing issues facing Turkey from a global perspective. This year the conference’s theme will be the Lausanne Conference and Treaty of July 24, 1923.
Lausanne was unique among the peace treaties that the victors of WWI settled with those states that would replace the defeated German, Habsburg, and Ottoman Empires: it reversed the Sèvres Treaty that had already been signed between the Allies and the Ottoman government on August 10, 1920. The Sèvres Treaty, which would have ceded much of the territory of the former Ottoman Empire to France, Britain, Italy, and Greece; created occupation zones around the Straits; and carved out Armenian and Kurdish territories, was never ratified. The Turkish nationalist resistance movement in Asia Minor was successful in negotiating a new peace agreement, and thus the Lausanne Treaty placed Eastern Thrace and Asia Minor under Turkish sovereignty.
Hence, Lausanne is considered a testament to the tenaciousness of the Turkish national resistance movement under the leadership of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, and has been called the “birth certificate” of the Turkish Republic. However, its “evil twin,” the Sèvres Treaty has played an equally formative role in the development of Turkish national identity and identity politics. The memory of this abrogated agreement has conjured in popular belief in Turkey a condition known as the “the Sèvres Syndrome,” referring to a conviction in various theories about seditious “external forces” [dıṣ mihraklar] attempting to revive the treaty and weaken or carve up the republic. As the centenary of Lausanne approaches, however, the "Sèvres Syndrome” has been eclipsed by, or rather subsumed under, new conspiracy theories about the so-called "secret articles" of Lausanne that hinder Turkey's extraction of oil and other precious resources, showcasing the centrality of the material world to the configuration of political narratives and imaginaries. The Treaty has also become politicized through top-down discourses even as these conspiracy theories are adopted, circulated, and mobilized by ordinary people in everyday life. The inspiration and some of the raw material mirror the rhetoric used by the highest representatives of the AKP regime to discredit the legacy of Kemalism. They include the president who insinuates that Lausanne was more a capitulation than a victory that ceded territories that should have remained part of the Turkish Republic, if not a revived Ottoman Empire.
While acknowledging the historical significance of the Lausanne Treaty’s unique position among post-WWI settlements in Eastern Europe and the Middle East, this conference seeks to analyze the conditions that made its conclusion possible and reconsider its aftermath up to the present day. The ethnic cleansing and demographic engineering of Anatolia started in the aftermath of the Congress of Berlin through the strategic settlement of Muslim refugees in areas where they would dilute the numbers of Christians and later be recruited to participate in massacres against the same. This process reached its peak during WWI under the genocidal regime of the Committee of Union and Progress. The internationally-sanctioned principle of the “unmixing” of peoples that tacitly endorsed the outcomes of such policies in the aftermath of the war, and the subsequent emergence of minority regimes in southeastern and eastern Europe and the Middle East have lately been analyzed by political scientists and anthropologists as well as historians. While we aim to further these discussions, we also seek to carry out an interdisciplinary analysis by bringing together various perspectives - from disciplines such as sociology, anthropology, political theory, and political economy - to consider the complex and enduring legacies of the Lausanne Treaty in contemporary Turkey and beyond.