Taraz, Nazlı

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Main Affiliation
01. Izmir Institute of Technology
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External
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Sustainable Development Goals

NO POVERTY1
NO POVERTY
1
Research Products
ZERO HUNGER2
ZERO HUNGER
1
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GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING3
GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
0
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QUALITY EDUCATION4
QUALITY EDUCATION
2
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GENDER EQUALITY5
GENDER EQUALITY
1
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CLEAN WATER AND SANITATION6
CLEAN WATER AND SANITATION
0
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AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY7
AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY
0
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DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH8
DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH
1
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INDUSTRY, INNOVATION AND INFRASTRUCTURE9
INDUSTRY, INNOVATION AND INFRASTRUCTURE
2
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REDUCED INEQUALITIES10
REDUCED INEQUALITIES
1
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SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIES11
SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIES
3
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RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION12
RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION
1
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CLIMATE ACTION13
CLIMATE ACTION
0
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LIFE BELOW WATER14
LIFE BELOW WATER
0
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LIFE ON LAND15
LIFE ON LAND
0
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PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS16
PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS
1
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PARTNERSHIPS FOR THE GOALS17
PARTNERSHIPS FOR THE GOALS
0
Research Products
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Scholarly Output

4

Articles

2

Views / Downloads

3690/4030

Supervised MSc Theses

1

Supervised PhD Theses

1

WoS Citation Count

0

Scopus Citation Count

0

Patents

0

Projects

0

WoS Citations per Publication

0.00

Scopus Citations per Publication

0.00

Open Access Source

4

Supervised Theses

2

JournalCount
A/Z ITU Journal of the Faculty of Architecture2
Current Page: 1 / 1

Scopus Quartile Distribution

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Scholarly Output Search Results

Now showing 1 - 4 of 4
  • Doctoral Thesis
    An Inquiry Into the Construction of National Memory in the Republican Period: Assembly Buildings of Turkey
    (Izmir Institute of Technology, 2021) Yılmaz, Ebru; Taraz, Nazlı; Yılmaz, Ebru; 01. Izmir Institute of Technology; 02.02. Department of Architecture; 02. Faculty of Architecture
    At the turn of the 19th century, Anatolian lands witnessed a grandiose change in policy by questioning longstanding Ottoman monarchy. Amongst several steps paced towards a new regime, a series of reforms initiated a comprehensive transformation in political and socio-cultural contexts of the Empire towards a Republic. In pursuit of succeeding regulations, the lands of the Ottoman Empire transformed into the homeland of the Turkish Republic after a long and challenging period. Inherently, such an extensive conversion did not occur all at once but materialized in a completely new manner of mentality actualized in architectural spaces, collective events and mass media of the state. Amongst these operational tools, the assembly buildings of Turkey take a critical position by iconically and officially representing the new Turkish national identity in the urban context from 1920. Grounding on archival evidence and discourse analysis, this study inquires the crucial position of the assembly buildings as memory spaces while actively participating to the construction of Republican identities. In order to understand how the assembly buildings of Turkey carve a special niche for themselves while keeping and representing the collective memory of the state, a thematic approach is proposed upon their concretizations, commemorations and imagery constructions in time. Thus, the inquiry on the physical existences, collective uses and printed representations of the assembly buildings constitute the backbone of this study to understand active role of these three building as memory spaces and meaning storages of the Turkish Republic.
  • Article
    Limits of Re-Writing and Legibility of Transformations in Istanbul's Historic Peninsula: an Interpretation Inspired From the Wabi-Sabi Philosophy
    (İstanbul Teknik Üniversitesi, 2013) Taraz, Nazlı; Taraz, Nazlı; 01. Izmir Institute of Technology
    The Japanese philosophy Wabi regards beauty as the results of imperfections and changes of daily life, and Sabi teaching supports this attitude by advocating the idea that life experiences and accumulation of years are important factors increasing beauty. From the viewpoint of Wabi- Sabi, urban transformation is an inevitable and imperfect activity that, nevertheless, always progresses to beauty. In this article, the Wabi-Sabi philosophy will be related to the event’s theme “imperfection” and life experiences to analyze Istanbul as “the palimpsest city”. The discussion will be carried out step by step from the first urban settlement at the Historic Peninsula and the following transformations in the light of Wabi-Sabi philosophy, by tracing the continuities and changes at the civic heart of the city.
  • Master Thesis
    The Hagia Sophia in Its Urban Context: an Interpretation of the Transformations of an Architectural Monument With Its Changing Physical and Cultural Environment
    (Izmir Institute of Technology, 2014) Taraz, Nazlı; Aktüre, Zeynep; Taraz, Nazlı; Aktüre, Zeynep; 01. Izmir Institute of Technology; 02.02. Department of Architecture; 02. Faculty of Architecture
    In this thesis, Hagia Sophia in Istanbul is handled as a living monument in its physical and cultural context in the Historic Peninsula to question the existence of a correlation between the changes in the building scale and transformations in a larger physical and cultural context. In order to do this, urban and architectural scale studies on the Historic Peninsula and Hagia Sophia are cross-read to highlight Hagia Sophia as the center of a continuously changing physical and cultural context which is changing with its transforming environment and, at the same time, changes its context through conversions that occur in the building scale up to the Ottoman conquest in the fifteenth century. This survey reveals Hagia Sophia as one of the most important architectural monuments in the world that has been a continually transforming edifice to remain in use for different civilizations in a synchronously changing urban context. The importance of the urban context of Hagia Sophia has had a major share in the maintenance of the building’s importance. Changes and continuities in Hagia Sophia, in their turn, had their share in the maintenance of the importance of the building’s urban context in a larger scale in a palimpsestic process.
  • Article
    A Study on the Daily Life and Coffeehouse Culture in Gaziantep: Tahmis Coffeehouse
    (İstanbul Teknik Üniversitesi, 2016) Taraz, Nazlı; Yılmaz, Ebru; Taraz, Nazlı; Yılmaz, Ebru; 01. Izmir Institute of Technology; 02.02. Department of Architecture; 02. Faculty of Architecture
    The nineteenth century may be seen as a rupture in the field of history regarding its changing focus from glorious narratives of empires, wars and treatises to lives of ordinary people and individual stories. The actors of historical narrative ignored up to that time came to the forefront with the new micro-historical approach and individual stories gained importance in historical process. By using oral history, the very beginning of the social structures of societies can be revealed and a new historical narrative can be constructed upon daily life events and micro-histories. In a parallel vein, in the twentieth century, researchers studied individuals and their role in construction of society to re-interpret social and cultural conditions under the title of cultural studies. Importantly, culture is handled as an accumulation of shared values and daily life praxis and public spaces are regarded as valuable cores where collectively shared values are spatialized in the urban context. In this paper, the historical Tahmis Coffeehouse in Gaziantep is determined as case and micro-historical and cultural studies are combined to construct a connection between past and present by intertwining oral narratives of Coffeehouse regulars to written evidence. This interconnection is found precious because Tahmis Coffeehouse is a public space involved in daily life routine of the city lively with its traces from the history carried by the building itself and its regulars by revealing how it was used as a political and social space connecting its regulars to social, cultural and political context of the time.