Interviews with women and men who agreed to speak to me about their
memories of the 1930s were crucial windows into understanding the
many facets of the way the Surname Law was received. For the memory
slices they shared with me in their older years, I thank my interviewees
with all my heart. I do not claim that this book is a comprehensive coverage
of all demographic groups’ experiences of the Surname Law; rather,
this study reveals patterns of experience, paths of internalization, and corridors
of remembering of Turkish citizens residing in Western Turkey.
Though I contemplated collecting additional data encompass a broader
demographic base, I decided to leave that step to a later project, since it
would also be informed by a dramatically different present and would be
conducted with a different generation.
In its earlier incarnation, this book was a dissertation submitted to the
University of Pennsylvania’s Graduate Program in Folklore and Folklife.
In the following pages, I have expanded the manuscript with additional
archival documentation from the Prime Ministry Archives, unpublished
documents from the population registry, updated to reflect more recent
work, and woven through conceptual strands from law and narrative and
sociolinguistics.