“Show me your phone!”: Affect, neoliberal rationality, and nationalism in Türkiye’s street interviews

Bulut, Ergin and Can, Başak. 2025. “Show me your phone!”: Affect, neoliberal rationality, and nationalism in Türkiye’s street interviews. European Journal of Cultural Studies, ISSN 1367-5494 [Article] (In Press)

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Abstract or Description

As a recent cultural phenomenon, street interviews (vox pops, sokak röportajları) in Türkiye have challenged the country’s captured media ecology and its neoliberal authoritarian establishment. Produced by journalists and circulated through social media, these interviews invite citizens to reflect on pressing national problems but soon become sites of intense political debate. In their discussions with dissidents in these interviews, pro-government citizens frequently say “show me your phone” in the middle of the discussion to deflect political criticism. With this statement, pro-government citizens produce affective encounters, mobilize neoliberal rationality, and circulate a nationalist politics of thankfulness. Probing the political work of “show me your phone,” we make a call for theorizing global neoliberal populisms beyond populist strongmen's official talks and through ordinary citizens’ affective and networked performances around everyday objects.

Item Type:

Article

Keywords:

smartphone, social media, Türkiye, neoliberalism, populism, authoritarianism, nationalism, affect, vox pops

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Media, Communications and Cultural Studies
Media, Communications and Cultural Studies > Centre for the Study of Global Media and Democracy

Dates:

DateEvent
4 September 2025Accepted

Item ID:

39571

Date Deposited:

12 Sep 2025 10:18

Last Modified:

12 Sep 2025 10:22

Peer Reviewed:

Yes, this version has been peer-reviewed.

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/39571

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