Yeni Adam
Yeni Adam (Turkish: The New Man) was a cultural magazine which was published in Istanbul, Turkey, between 1934 and 1979 with some interruptions. It was one of the publications which were started to support the policies and ideas of the newly founded Republic of Turkey. In line with this aim the title of the magazine was a reference to the person who would be a product of the Republic.[1][2]
| Editor | İsmail Baltacıoğlu |
|---|---|
| Categories | Cultural magazine |
| Frequency |
|
| Founder | İsmail Baltacıoğlu |
| First issue | 1 January 1934 |
| Final issue | June 1979 |
| Country | Turkey |
| Based in | Istanbul |
| Language | Turkish |
History and profile
Yeni Adam was first published on 1 January 1934 and had 12 pages.[3] Its founder was İsmail Baltacıoğlu who edited the magazine until 1960s.[4] He was one of the advisors of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.[2] The magazine was first published by the Letâfet publishing house in Istanbul on a weekly basis.[3] Yeni Adam ceased publication for one year on 3 March 1938 when it was closed by the Turkish government due to its extensive criticism over Nazi Germany.[1] The magazine was restarted on 9 March 1939.[3]
Its publisher was Sebat Publishers, İstanbul, in the 1940s.[5] From 6 December 1951 Yeni Adam came out monthly.[3] It folded following the publication of the issue 921 dated June 1979.[3]
Contributors and content
There was no regular contributors of the magazine.[3] Throughout its long history many notable figures published articles in Yeni Adam, including Nurullah Ataç, Hüsamettin Bozok, Suphi Nuri İleri, Bedri Rahmi Eyüboğlu, and Zühtü Müritoğlu.[3] The magazine's founder and editor İsmail Baltacıoğlu also published articles in the magazine.[2][6]
Yeni Adam supported nationalism, traditionalism, secularism, statism and revolutionary approach[4] and covered articles on different topics such as literary work, poetry, psychology, scientific and philosophical news[3] It also published translations from the western publications.[3] The magazine also featured political articles until February 1938 when it was temporarily banned.[3] Following its restart next year Yeni Adam did not contain political articles until its demise in 1979.[3]
Baltacıoğlu's writings in Yeni Adam were mostly about women.[6] The magazine argued that women's sole function was that of being a homemaker, but due to their emotional nature they cannot be successful in public sphere.[7] The magazine frequently addressed sexuality implicitly and explicitly.[7] It advocated sexual practice within matrimony and condemned such acts outside marriage.[7] For the contributors of Yeni Adam romantic love was a reflection of weakness, immaturity, and sickness, and marriages should be based mutual understanding between pairs from the same or similar social background.[7] One of these authors was the Turkish psychologist, İzeddin Şadan, who was among the leading figures in psychoanalysis in Turkey.[8] He described love as "a volatile microbe” resulting in diseases “like measles, pneumonia and typhoid", and claimed that it should be cured like others.[8] Şadan introduced his three-step scientific treatment of love which was developed based on the principles of modern psychiatry in the magazine.[8]
References
- Yasemin Türkkan (May 2011). "Cumhuriyet Öyküsünün Kahramanını Yaratmak: Yeni Adam". Türk Yurdu. 100 (282).
- Nazım İrem (February 2002). "Turkish Conservative Modernism: Birth of a Nationalist Quest for Cultural Renewal". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 34 (1): 90–99. doi:10.1017/S0020743802001046. JSTOR 3880169. S2CID 146794994.
- Yasemin Türkkan Tunalı (3 March 2021). "Yeni Adam Dergisi". Atatürk Encyclopedia (in Turkish).
- Şahin Filiz; Tahir Uluç (2006). "Contemporary Turkish Thought". In Ibrahim M. Abu-Rabi (ed.). The Blackwell Companion to Contemporary Islamic Thought. Malden, MA; Oxford: Blackwell Publishing Ltd. pp. 31, 34. doi:10.1002/9780470996188. hdl:11693/50902. ISBN 978-1-4051-7848-8.
- "Yeni Adam". SALT Research. Retrieved 1 April 2023.
- Aylin Özman (2010). "The Image of "Woman" in Turkish Political and Social Thought: On the Implications of Social Constructionism and Biological Essentialism". Turkish Studies. 11 (3): 447. doi:10.1080/14683849.2010.506735. S2CID 143940179.
- Gülsüm Baydur (2007). "Room for a Newlywed Woman Making Sense of Gender in the Architectural Discourse of Early Republican Turkey". Journal of Architectural Education. 60 (3): 6–7. doi:10.1111/j.1531-314X.2007.00090.x. S2CID 143318538.
- Gözde Kılıç (2020). "Turkey's Pioneering Psychoanalyst: İzeddin Şadan's Disquisition on (Homosexual) Love as Sickness". On_Culture: The Open Journal for the Study of Culture (9). doi:10.22029/oc.2020.1174.