Hayat (magazine)
Hayat
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description | magazine |
Area of Expertise | Science, philosophy and art |
language | Ottoman-Turkish |
Headquarters | Ankara and Istanbul |
First edition | 1926 |
attitude | 1929 |
founder | Sabiha Sertel and Zekeriya Sertel |
Frequency of publication | weekly |
editor | Mehmet Emin, Nâfi Atuf and Fâruk Nâfiz |
Web link | Hayat |
ZDB | 895113-5 |
The Ottoman- Turkish weekly Hayat ( Ottoman حيات İA Hayāt ; German "Leben" ) was published from 1926 to 1929 in Ankara and Istanbul in a total of 146 editions. After Mehmet Emin Erişirgil was the editor for the first 75 issues, Nâfî Atuf Kansu and then Faruk Nafız Çamlıbel took over the post. The magazine called itself a "literary opinion magazine".
The content of the magazine was aimed particularly at writers and philosophers and was intended to encourage intellectuals to write innovatively. It also contained a special edition for women.
In addition to numerous articles, poems, stories, essays, reviews and biographies, various images, photographs and illustrations of political, intellectual and literary personalities, works of art and public events were also published. Well-known authors include a. Köprülüzade Mehmet Fuat , Fazıl Ahmet , Mustafa Şekip Tunç , Mehmet İzzet , Ahmet Refik and Necmettin Sadık .
The selection of topics was broad and should arouse the interest of readers in various ways, as emphasized by the main article of the 1st edition. The spectrum ranged from political issues such as nationalism , reformism , progress , modernization , nationalization and the improvement of the economy to art and science . In general, the magazine supported the legitimacy of the new government. For example, a 1929 article wooing Mustafa Kemal shows her connection to the ideology of the new Turkish republic .
The adoption of the Latin alphabet in place of Arabic began from the 90th edition in August 1928, with full use of Latin letters finally being introduced with the 95th edition in September 1928.
A subscription to the magazine was available both inside and outside the country.
Web links
- urn : nbn: de: hbz: 5: 1-229166
- translatio.uni-bonn.de Homepage of the Bonn digitization project
- Arabic, Persian and Ottoman-Turkish periodicals. Digital collections of the ULB Bonn
Individual evidence
- ↑ Çilem Tuğba Akdağ, Ebru Davulcu: Magazine Of Intellectual Community In Building A New Nation, Hayat (1926–1929) . In: IJASOS - International E-Journal of Advances in Social Sciences . tape 2 , no. 5 , 2016, p. 432-34 ( ijasos.ocerintjournals.org [PDF; 557 kB ]).
- ↑ a b cílem Tuğba Akdağ, Ebru Davulcu: Magazine Of Intellectual Into Building A New Nation, Hayat (1926-1929) . In: IJASOS - International E-Journal of Advances in Social Sciences . tape 2 , no. 5 , 2016, p. 433 ( ijasos.ocerintjournals.org [PDF; 557 kB ]).
- ↑ a b D. Fatma door: Facts and Fantasies: Images of Istanbul Women in the 1920s . Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2015, pp. xviii .
- ↑ a b cílem Tuğba Akdağ, Ebru Davulcu: Magazine Of Intellectual Into Building A New Nation, Hayat (1926-1929) . In: IJASOS - International E-Journal of Advances in Social Sciences . tape 2 , no. 5 , 2016, p. 435 ( ijasos.ocerintjournals.org [PDF; 557 kB ]).
- ↑ Çilem Tuğba Akdağ, Ebru Davulcu: Magazine Of Intellectual Community In Building A New Nation, Hayat (1926–1929) . In: IJASOS - International E-Journal of Advances in Social Sciences . tape 2 , no. 5 , 2016, p. 432 ( ijasos.ocerintjournals.org [PDF; 557 kB ]).
- ↑ Hayat . tape 1 , 1926.
- ↑ a b cílem Tuğba Akdağ, Ebru Davulcu: Magazine Of Intellectual Into Building A New Nation, Hayat (1926-1929) . In: IJASOS - International E-Journal of Advances in Social Sciences . tape 2 , no. 5 , 2016, p. 433-436 ( ijasos.ocerintjournals.org [PDF; 557 kB ]).