c o n t e n t s
f o r e w o r d
A Time-Honored Literature
vii
n o t e o n t u r k i sh spe l l i n g a n d n a m e s
xi
The Dawn in Asia
1
Selçuk Sufism
11
Ottoman Glories
25
Timeless Tales
55
Occidental Orientation
63
Republic and Renascence
81
a f t erwor d
The Future of Turkish Literature
133
s u g g e s t e d r e a di n g
139
i n d e x
155
bio g r a ph i c a l n o t e s
169
vii
f or e wor d
A Time-Honored Literature
Ta l at S. H a l m a n
r o m O r h o n i n s c r i p t i o n s t o O r h a n Pa m u k : that could
serve as a defi nition of the life story of Turkish
literature from the eighth
century a.d. to the present day. A geographic span from Outer Mongolia and
the environs of China through Inner Asia, the Caucasus, the Middle East
and
North Africa, the Balkans and Europe all the way to North America. An
amalgam of cultural and literary orientations that has embraced such tradi-
tions and infl uences as Chinese, Indian, Turkic, Mongolian, Uyghur, Rus-
sian, Arabo-Persian, Islamic, Sufi , Judaeo-Christian, Greek, Mesopotamian,
Roman,
Byzantine, European and Mediterranean, Scandinavian, Germanic
and British, French and Spanish,
North American, and Latin American.
Always receptive to the nurturing values, aesthetic tastes, and literary
penchants from diverse civilizations, Turkish
culture succeeded in evolv-
ing a sui generis personality. It clung to its own established traits, yet it was
fl exible enough to welcome innovations—or even revolutionary change.
Among living literatures that preceded Turkish literature, one can cite
the Hebrew, Chinese, Greek, Arabic, Persian, German, Indian, Irish, Span-
ish, and perhaps two or three others.
Literature, the premier
genre of Turkish culture, had its dawn in Mon-
golia’s Orhon Valley, where in the 720s and 730s the Köktürks erected ste-
lae featuring their historical narratives. Th
ese inscriptions still stand in
situ. Th
ey relate the Köktürk
experiences of confl ict, defeat, and regained
sovereignty. In moving terms, they emphasize the importance of cultural
authenticity and of a quasi-national consciousness.
Turkic poetry made its debut in the Uyghur dialect presumably in the
sixth century, although it is diffi
cult to ascertain the exact date. By the
tenth century, it had become a living tradition.
viii
Foreword
Th
e
Dede Korkut
tales
(Th
e Book of Dede Korkut),
oft en characterized
as “the Turkish national epic,” probably had their origins in the tenth cen-
tury, although the epic took about another fi ve centuries
to make its transi-
tion from the oral tradition to its fi rst written version.
It was in the second half of the eleventh century that two early major
literary works,
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