Turkism, Islamism and Modernism

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OriginaltitleTürkleşmek, İslamlaşmak, Muasırlaşmak
LanguageTurkish
GenreEssay
Turkism, Islamism and Modernism
the author, Ziya Gökalp
AuthorZiya Gökalp
Original titleTürkleşmek, İslamlaşmak, Muasırlaşmak
LanguageTurkish
GenreEssay
PublisherEvkaf-ı İslamiye Matbaası
Publication date
1918
Publication placeTurkey (Ottoman Turkey)

Turkism, Islamism and Modernism (Turkish: Türkleşmek, İslamlaşmak, Muasırlaşmak) is a book written by Ziya Gökalp published in 1918 after the Balkan Wars. The book reflects his perspectives on various subjects and the political landscape of the Ottoman Empire during the writing process of the book, along with his personal political ideologies involving with the issues presented in the book.

The book is a compilation of various essays which were written under the title "Türkleşmek, İslâmlaşmak, Muâsırlaşmak" by Ziya Gökalp around 1913–1914, for literary magazines namely Türk Yurdu (Turkish Land) and İslam Mecmuası (Magazine of Islam), as a serialized work that had been released in different issues.[1] Book is composed of eleven chapters and every chapter contains multiple essays which have episodes where the author expresses personal political views.[2]

The book has been first compiled and published in Evkaf-ı İslamiye Matbaası in 1918. Written in fairly plain Ottoman Turkish, the main point of the book was, just like other books of Ziya Gökalp, to inform the Turkish public as part of the National Literature movement. On 24 July 1923, Turkish nation has officially declared independence, in 1923 he was appointed as a "Maarif Vekâleti Telif ve Tercüme" (Ministry of Education Copyright and Translation) minister and consequently died on 25 October 1924 as he was suffering from a certain illness.[3]

In 1930s, as Kemalism was getting popular, the book had a stagnating popularity as the proposal of Turkish–Islamic synthesis had no audience in the general population however book regained popularity in course of 1940s to 1970s.[3] Book has been republished by Ministry of Culture in modern Turkish alphabet, transliterated from Ottoman Turkish alphabet by İbrahim Kutluk, in 1976.[4] The Ötüken Neşriyat again republished the book in 2014 more faithful to the original Ottoman alphabet tone but again in modern Turkish alphabet, therefore retaining the publishing and popularity of the book.[5]

Chapters

Source:[6]

  1. Üç Cereyan (Three Movements)
  2. Lisan (Language)
  3. An'ane ve Kaid (Narratives and Belief)
  4. Hars Zümresi, Medeniyet Zümresi (Party of Culture and Party of Civilisation)
  5. Türklüğün Başına Gelenler (What Happened to Turkishness)
  6. Terbiye (Discipline)
  7. Mefkure (Ideal)
  8. Türk Milleti ve Turan (Turkish Nation and Turan)
  9. Millet ve Vatan (Nation and Land)
  10. Milliyet Mefkuresi (Ideal of Nation)
  11. Milliyet ve İslâmiye (Nationality and Islam)

Ideological views

See also

References

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