Master Thesis Defense: Silvia Ilonka Wolf
“We Are All Animals”: The Emergence of the Grassroots Nonhuman Animal
Rights Movement in Istanbul
Silvia Ilonka Wolf
Turkish Studies, M.Sc. Thesis, 2015
Thesis Jury
Ayşe Öncü(Thesis Supervisor), Ayşe Gül Altınay, Ozan Zeybek, Hilal Alkan (Substitute Member)
Date &Time: August,5th , 2015 – 10:00
Place: Karaköy Minerva Han
Abstract
Within merely a few years time a radical nonhuman animal rights movement with an explicitly vegan character has appeared on the activist scene in Istanbul and in other locations in Turkey. This thesis looks into some of its characteristics. How does a carnist turn into a nonhuman animal rights activist; what are the patterns that characterize the transition to a vegan (or vegetarian) lifestyle and recruitment into the animal rights movement? And what do these findings imply for the collective action frames that vegan missionaries in Istanbul employ to convert and recruit new people? Generally internal divisions within the nonhuman animal rights movement in Istanbul are based on differences regarding collective action frames, which lead activists to apply certain tactics and reject others. Through shedding light on the disputes over frames and tactics it appears that there is a high degree of knowledge within the movement. I suggest that the relatively late emergence of the animal rights movement in Turkey has enabled activists to look critically at what has gone wrong in the animal rights movement elsewhere. The critical perspective by animal rights activists in Turkey has led to the movement’s radical character and the concern on the part of activists to apply the “right” tactics. This also explains the high degree of awareness regarding other forms of discrimination than speciesism, such as sexism, heterosexism, racism, nationalism, and misanthropy. The participation of nonhuman animal rights activists in the Gezi protests further accelerated the cooperation between the animal rights movement and other social justice movements. Nevertheless, internal frame disputes reveal that work remains to be done when it comes to avoiding other forms of discrimination within the movement. Critical intersectional voices are on the rise; pushing the movement for further self-improvement. The vibrancy of nonhuman animal rights activism, the plethora of organized groups, and the increasing popularity of veganism are promising signs for the animal rights movement in Turkey.