Millennium of Turkish Literature : a concise History



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A Millennium of Turkish Literature A Concise History ( PDFDrive )

A Millennium of Turkish Literature
intellectuals pressed for extensive changes patterned aft er European mod-
els. Th
e decline of the Ottoman Empire reached a critical point by the 
middle of the nineteenth century. Younger Turkish intellectuals started 
seeking the empire’s salvation in technological development, political 
reform, and cultural progress fashioned aft er European prototypes.
1
New genres, adopted from Europe, gained ascendancy: fi ction, drama 
for the legitimate stage, journalistic writing, the critical essay, and others. 
Translations and adaptations accelerated the Europeanization of Turkish 
literature. Young poets came into contact with European aesthetic theo-
ries and values. Although 
aruz
was not abandoned, Turkish poets experi-
mented with forms, rhythms, and styles. A reaction began to set in against 
excessive use of words of Arabic and Persian origin.
Although these ventures and the new genres curtailed the supremacy 
of verse, poetry was to retain much of its hold over Turkish intellectual 
life. Particularly at times of social upheaval, it oft en played a considerably 
wider and more eff ective role than many other media.
In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, poets were the princi-
pal champions of fundamental rights and freedoms—the conveyors of the 
concepts of nationalism, modernization, social and political reform.
Poetry acquired a social awareness and a political function in the 
hands of some poets who endeavored to gain independence from exter-
nal political domination. Ziya Pasha (1829–80), Şinasi (1826–71), and 
Namık Kemal (1840–88) emerged as literary advocates of nationalism. 
Recaizade Ekrem (1847–1914) and Abdülhak Hâmit Tarhan (1852–1937) 
echoed the French romantics. Th
e latter, a prolifi c poet and author of 
numerous verse dramas, gained stature as a ceaseless innovator. His 
poetry covered a wide range of topics and had a philosophic bent as well 
as a dramatic impact.
Th
e nineteenth-century men of letters inherited the classical and the 
folk traditions, but they turned their attention to the literary tastes and 
movements of the West—in particular those of France and, to a lesser 
extent, England.
1. In addition to Bernard Lewis’s 
Th
e Emergence of Modern Turkey
(London: Oxford 
Univ. Press, 1966; 3rd ed., 2002), some interesting insights can also be found in Halide Edib 
(Adıvar), 
Turkey Faces West
(New Haven, Conn.: Yale Univ. Press, 1930).


Occidental Orientation
65
Th
e poetry of the Tanzimat Period and its aft ermath had the impera-
tive of revamping its forms, style, and content. It also assumed the task 
of giving voice to civil disobedience. Its practitioners, despite censorship, 
oft en acted as provocateurs and agitators for reform and social innovation 
and as propagators of rebellion against tyranny.
Poetry became a standard-bearer for such concepts as justice, nation, 
reform, sovereignty, modernization, freedom, progress, and rights. Şinasi 
challenged the sultan’s absolutism by recognizing Grand Vizier Reşid Pasha as 
a kind of constitutional authority. Praising Reşit Pasha as a new type of leader, 
he asked, “Is it any wonder that you are called the apostle of civilization?” and 
referred to the grand vizier as “the president of the virtuous people.” Şinasi 
assigned a new kind of legislative authority to him: “Your law admonishes the 
sultan about his limits.” Tanzimat poetry also introduced critical views of the 
Islamic world, as in an excerpt from Ziya Pasha’s famous lament:
In the land of the infi del, I have seen cities and mansions,
In the dominions of Islam, ruin and devastation.
I have seen countless fools condescend to Plato
Within the Sublime Porte, that home of divagation.
A traveler on this earth to which we’re all condemned,
I have seen governments and their houses of assassination.
(Translated by Nermin Menemencioğlu)
2
Ziya Pasha produced a long satiric poem, many parts of which his con-
temporaries committed to memory and Turks still widely quote:
Th
ose who embezzle millions are ensconced in glory
Th
ose who fi lch pennies are condemned to hard labor.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
How could a uniform make a base fellow noble?
Put a gold-lined saddle on him, the ass is still an ass.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Pardon is the privilege of the holders of high offi
ce;
Is the penal code used only against the meek?
2.

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