Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Ottoman propaganda and Turkish identity : literature in Turkey during World War I / Erol Köroǧlu.

By: Köroğlu, ErolMaterial type: TextTextLanguage: English Original language: Turkish Series: Library of Ottoman studies ; v. 13.Publication details: London ; New York : Tauris Academic Studies : In the United States of America and Canada distributed by Palgrave Macmillan, 2007. Description: xxiii, 244 p. ; 23 cmISBN: 1845114906; 9781845114909Subject(s): 1900-1999 | Turkish literature -- 20th century -- History and criticism | World War, 1914-1918 -- Influence | World War, 1914-1918 -- Turkey -- Propaganda | Nationalism and literature -- TurkeyGenre/Form: Criticism, interpretation, etc.LOC classification: PL216 | .K676 2007Review: "The Great War was the first example of a total war in history, reflected in the cultures and literatures of Europe in the shape of propaganda. What began as civic patriotism developed into a weapon of war, programmed and organized by the state to devastating effect. In almost all countries, writers of different ideological hues were ready to undertake the job of representing the war, in accordance with the state's guidance." "War propaganda in the Ottoman Empire, the most anachronistic belligerent of the war according to historians, was condemned to failure. In the underdeveloped and multi-ethnic Ottoman Empire, the Ottoman-Turkish intelligentsia could not produce adequate propaganda to support the battlefronts and the home front. Why did propaganda efforts die after 1915? Can this be explained with the laziness or cosmopolitanism of the cultural agents? Or did the lack of propaganda derive from reasons that are more material?" "Erol Koroglu seeks to address these questions in an interdisciplinary assessment of Turkish literature and propaganda, interpreting literary texts written by the representative writers of the period. These interpretations follow a literary cultural history method and give an analysis of the complex interaction between literary texts and the historical context. Koroglu discusses the subjects of First World War propaganda, Turkish nationalism and national identity construction. He concludes that the unfavourable conditions in the Ottoman-Turkish cultural sphere, the literature of the years 1914-1918, even if superficially full of propaganda aims, was essentially the continuation of a project to build a national culture, inherited from the pre-war years and never completed. Turkish literature therefore did not reflect powerful propaganda, but was more a difficult attempt to create 'national identity'."--Jacket
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books The BIAA David H. French Library
Shelf 62 - Reading Room
H2n KÖROĞ 29056 Not for loan BOOKS*000000022027

Shortened version of "Türk edebiyatı ve Birinci Dünya Savaşı" published by İletişim in Turkish, 2004, originated author's thesis (Bogazici Univ., Istanbul, 2003)--Acknowledgements.

Includes bibliographical references (p. [226]-237) and index.

"The Great War was the first example of a total war in history, reflected in the cultures and literatures of Europe in the shape of propaganda. What began as civic patriotism developed into a weapon of war, programmed and organized by the state to devastating effect. In almost all countries, writers of different ideological hues were ready to undertake the job of representing the war, in accordance with the state's guidance." "War propaganda in the Ottoman Empire, the most anachronistic belligerent of the war according to historians, was condemned to failure. In the underdeveloped and multi-ethnic Ottoman Empire, the Ottoman-Turkish intelligentsia could not produce adequate propaganda to support the battlefronts and the home front. Why did propaganda efforts die after 1915? Can this be explained with the laziness or cosmopolitanism of the cultural agents? Or did the lack of propaganda derive from reasons that are more material?" "Erol Koroglu seeks to address these questions in an interdisciplinary assessment of Turkish literature and propaganda, interpreting literary texts written by the representative writers of the period. These interpretations follow a literary cultural history method and give an analysis of the complex interaction between literary texts and the historical context. Koroglu discusses the subjects of First World War propaganda, Turkish nationalism and national identity construction. He concludes that the unfavourable conditions in the Ottoman-Turkish cultural sphere, the literature of the years 1914-1918, even if superficially full of propaganda aims, was essentially the continuation of a project to build a national culture, inherited from the pre-war years and never completed. Turkish literature therefore did not reflect powerful propaganda, but was more a difficult attempt to create 'national identity'."--Jacket