This book examines EU discourses on Turkey in the European Commission,
European Parliament and three EU member states (France, Germany and
Britain), to reveal the discursive construction of European identity
through EU representations of Turkey. Based on a poststructuralist
framework that conceptualizes identity as discursively constructed
through difference, the book applies Critical Discourse Analysis to the
analysis of texts and argues that there are multiple Europe(s) that are
constructed in talks over the enlargement of Turkey, varying within and
between different ideological, national and institutional contexts. The
book discerns four main discourse topics over which these Europe(s) are
constructed, corresponding to the conceptualization of Europe as a
security community, as an upholder of democratic values, as a political
project and as a cultural space. The book argues that Turkey constitutes
a key case in exploring various discursive constructs of European
identity, since the talks on Turkey pave the way for the construction of
different versions of Europe in discourse.