Reforms introduced in 1839 (known as the Tanzimat) which were intended to modernize the Ottoman political and administrative structure, led inevitably to movements which introduced new literary ideas into the Ottoman cultural sphere. One of the first writers who wished to see Ottoman literature catch up with developments in Europe was Abdulhalim Memduh (1866 - 1905). His contributions covered the areas of poetry, prose, drama, journalism and political activism. Memduh was not content with using classical chronicles; he published at the age of 22 the very first History of Ottoman Literature in Turkish, which served as the model for subsequent literary histories. Later, in his short life, he collaborated with Edmond Fazy, a Swiss writer, to p...
This article examines an engagement with the European debate on the ‘despotic’ nature of the Ottoman...
Egypt, which hosted many civilizations throught all periods of the history, now continues to attract...
In the final decades of the Ottoman Empire, a group of authors in the Syro-Lebanese diaspora includi...
This article considers late nineteenth-century Ottoman literature, concentrating specifically on the...
The movement of Turkish literature is divided into several broad periods of Turkish writers. Older ...
L’historiographie littéraire turque semble avoir épousé la définition de la « turcité », établie au ...
Turkish literature is considered one of the most significant arts in the world. This art has its im...
Abstract: The first movements towards the modernization in Ottoman thought have been witnessed at th...
This article deals with analysis of publication of Gülhane noble decree (3 November 1839) which is a...
International audienceTurkish literary historiography seems to have espoused the definition of “Turk...
This article centers around the figure of Peyami Safa, a classic of Turkish literary modernism, and...
This article examines an engagement with the European debate on the ‘despotic’ nature of the Ottoman...
This article examines an engagement with the European debate on the ‘despotic’ nature of the Ottoman...
Stefan Lemmy : Rumanian studies of Ottoman History. This article shows how the dominating political...
This article examines an engagement with the European debate on the ‘despotic’ nature of the Ottoman...
This article examines an engagement with the European debate on the ‘despotic’ nature of the Ottoman...
Egypt, which hosted many civilizations throught all periods of the history, now continues to attract...
In the final decades of the Ottoman Empire, a group of authors in the Syro-Lebanese diaspora includi...
This article considers late nineteenth-century Ottoman literature, concentrating specifically on the...
The movement of Turkish literature is divided into several broad periods of Turkish writers. Older ...
L’historiographie littéraire turque semble avoir épousé la définition de la « turcité », établie au ...
Turkish literature is considered one of the most significant arts in the world. This art has its im...
Abstract: The first movements towards the modernization in Ottoman thought have been witnessed at th...
This article deals with analysis of publication of Gülhane noble decree (3 November 1839) which is a...
International audienceTurkish literary historiography seems to have espoused the definition of “Turk...
This article centers around the figure of Peyami Safa, a classic of Turkish literary modernism, and...
This article examines an engagement with the European debate on the ‘despotic’ nature of the Ottoman...
This article examines an engagement with the European debate on the ‘despotic’ nature of the Ottoman...
Stefan Lemmy : Rumanian studies of Ottoman History. This article shows how the dominating political...
This article examines an engagement with the European debate on the ‘despotic’ nature of the Ottoman...
This article examines an engagement with the European debate on the ‘despotic’ nature of the Ottoman...
Egypt, which hosted many civilizations throught all periods of the history, now continues to attract...
In the final decades of the Ottoman Empire, a group of authors in the Syro-Lebanese diaspora includi...