Book contents
- Fixing Stories
- Reviews
- The Global Middle East
- Fixing Stories
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures & Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: A Tale of Two Fixers
- Part I Beginnings
- Part II Fitting In
- Are Fixers Journalists?
- Elif and José
- Elif and Burcu
- Orhan
- Karim
- Nur and İsmet
- Habib
- The Fixer’s Paradox
- Part III Moral Worlds of Ambivalence and Bias
- Part IV Translations
- Part V From Local to Global
- Appendix: Sociological Fiction
- Bibliography
- Index
Elif and José
from Part II - Fitting In
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 March 2022
- Fixing Stories
- Reviews
- The Global Middle East
- Fixing Stories
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures & Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: A Tale of Two Fixers
- Part I Beginnings
- Part II Fitting In
- Are Fixers Journalists?
- Elif and José
- Elif and Burcu
- Orhan
- Karim
- Nur and İsmet
- Habib
- The Fixer’s Paradox
- Part III Moral Worlds of Ambivalence and Bias
- Part IV Translations
- Part V From Local to Global
- Appendix: Sociological Fiction
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Elif happily adopted the label of fixer, at least in the early days. The title did not entirely make sense (what was broken and how did she fix it?) but sounded cool and signaled that her project of becoming intimately familiar with the Other Turkey was succeeding, that she was not an insulated bourgeois but a gritty on-the-ground woman of action. After her initial, thrilling induction into the craft during the Gezi protests, though, her duties as a fixer quickly became less adventurous and more mundane.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Fixing StoriesLocal Newsmaking and International Media in Turkey and Syria, pp. 53 - 58Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022