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Women's World (Ottoman magazine)

Women's World (Turkish: Kadınlar Dünyası) was a women's magazine that was published in Turkey from 4 April 1913, after the Balkan Wars, until 1921. The founder of the magazine was Nuriye Ulviye Mevlan Civelek. It was published by women writers in the Ottoman Society for the Defence of Women's Rights (Turkish: Osmanlı Müdafaa-i Hukuk-ı Nisvan Cemiyeti).

Women's World
The writer Yaşar Nezihe on the cover of the 124th issue of the Ottoman feminist magazine Kadınlar Dünyası
Editor-in-ChiefEmine Seher Hanim (issues 1–108)
FrequencyDaily (for the first 100 days), then weekly
Format4 pages (issues 1–100); 16 pages with images by time of final publication
Total circulation>3,000
FounderNuriye Ulviye Mevlan Civelek
Founded4 April 1913
Final issue21 May 1921
CountryTurkey

The magazine's purpose was to increase women's rights and freedoms, to raise awareness of women and to enable them to be active in work and social life. It was the first explicitly feminist magazine of the Ottoman Empire,[1][2]: 337  and the first to publish photographs of Ottoman Muslim women.[2]: 337 [3] The first 100 issues of Women's World, copies of which are in the archives of the Women's Works Library and Information Center Foundation, were transliterated into Roman script and republished by the foundation in 2009.[4][5]

Background Edit

Building on the societal change that took place through the Tanzimat and the Constitutional Monarchy, education beyond primary school became available to women for the first time, and women started to be more active in the Turkish press.[1] The Ottoman women's movement began to demand rights, in particular working to increase women's access to education and paid work, to abolish polygamy, and to reform dress codes, especially with respect to the peçe, an Islamic veil.[1]

Founding Edit

In April 1913 Nuriye Ulviye Mevlan Civelek founded Women's World magazine with the legacy of her husband, Hulusi Bey. Civelek also established the Ottoman Society for the Defense of Women's Rights (also translated as the Association for the Defence of the Rights of Ottoman Women, in Turkish: Osmanlı Müdâfaa-i Hukuk-ı Nisvan Cemiyeti),[6] to campaign for new rights and a freer social life for women. The association was established either in 1912 [7] or 1913.[8]

Women's World called on all women to fight for their rights, with a stated goal 'to defend the rights and interests of womanhood'. The first issue of the magazine explained their position:

"Until our rights are recognised in public law, until men and women are equal in every profession, Kadınlar Dünyası will not welcome men in its pages... Yes, some of the Ottoman men defend us Ottoman women. We see that and we thank them. However, we Ottoman women have our own ways and manners, and male writers can understand neither this, nor our psychology. Let them please leave us alone and not make toys for their dreams out of us. We can defend our rights by our own efforts." (Kadınlar Dünyası Editorial 1913).[9][8]

Publication Edit

The first issue of the magazine was published on 4 April 1913, and it appeared daily for the first hundred issues.[2]: 336  Initially, each issue was four-pages, without pictures. After the 100th issue, the journal had 16 pages with illustrations, and was published weekly.[6] The magazine broke new ground as the first to publish photographs of Ottoman Muslim women.[2]: 337 

The magazine owned their own printing press, and all staff from the editor, the writers, the typesetters and the printers, were women.[6] After it was printed in the Serbesti Printing House in Binbirdirek, it was distributed centrally in the Marifet Library in Beşiktaş, and then local distribution and sales were made in similar libraries.[10]

The French influence in the Ottoman Empire was also reflected in the magazine, and the French name "Monde Féminin" was placed on the bottom corner of the cover. A French supplement was given for a short time between issues 121 and 128. The reason for this supplement is explained in the magazine as "to ensure the mutual dialogue of our brothers and sisters in Europe".[3]

Although there is no exact information about the circulation of Women's World, an advertisement published in the 165th issue gives clues; the advertisement announces that 3,000 copies of the magazine will be printed due to paper shortages and that readers should subscribe to avoid the trouble of finding the magazine. Considering the war conditions of the period, this number is remarkable.[1][3]

The editor-in-chief of the magazine was Emine Seher Hanim until the 108th issue.[6] Regular contributors included Mükerrem Belkıs,[6] Atiye Şükran, Aliye Cevat, Safiye Büran, Aziz Haydar (1881–?),[6] Nimet Cemil, Meliha Cenan, Belkıs Şevket, Fatma Zerrin, Seniye Ata, Sacide and Mes'adet Bedirhan.[10] Haydar also opened and financed a private school for girls.[6]

Contents Edit

Women's World, which was written by and for women, included a large number of advertisements, as well as editorials, essays, short tales, translations, and audience letters, all of which addressed women's duties and problems.[7] In contrast to other magazines aimed at women at the time, it drew contributions from women from all sectors of society.[8] The focus of the magazine was the visibility of women in social life, participation in working life, reorganization of the rules on clothing outside the home, improving the education of girls, providing higher education for women, preventing marriages by arrangement, and improving the family.[6]

The magazine, which is a pioneering example of the struggle for independent and solidarity women in the Ottoman Empire, is noteworthy not only for its openness to women writers but also for its wide coverage of letters from its readers, which led to a diversity of viewpoints and the opportunity to respond to readers' concerns.[8]

Closure Edit

The Istanbul Library has 204 issues of Women's World in their catalogue.[6] The last issue was published on 21 May 1921.[8][6]

Reception and legacy Edit

Women's World advocated a "women's revolution" that would protect the rights of every woman, regardless of nationality, religion or social status. Considering the nationalist environment of the period, triggered especially by the Balkan Wars, the importance of this principle can be understood. In this respect, Women's World differs from other women's publications of the period, such as Ladies' Mahsus Gazette, which were dominated by nationalist rhetoric and that only accepted contributions from intellectual women. For this reason, Women's World is considered the first feminist publication in the Ottoman Empire.[1] Historian Serpil Çakır considers Kadınlar Dünyası "the most radical of the Ottoman women’s journals, in that it did not allow male writers to write in its columns".[8]

Women's World uses the word "feminism" as well as "Hukuk-i nisvan" (women's rights) and gives wide coverage of discussions on feminism. In response to the criticisms directed at the magazine by men that feminism is a word of foreign origin and therefore “not a concept belonging to this culture”, it replied that words such as “telegraph” and “tram” are not Turkish, but are adopted and used by everyone.[8][11]

Women's World advocated for women's rights in general but also ran campaigns on specific issues. As a result of one such campaign, seven women telephone operators were employed at the national telephone company.[6] A campaign centred around Women's World to allow women access to higher education led directly to the opening of The Women's University İnas Dârülfunûnu (now a part of Istanbul University) in September 1914, followed by the Academy of Fine Arts for Women, İnas Sanayi-i Nefise Mektebi.[12]

The magazine received attention, congratulations and encouragement from the foreign press, and reporters Grace Ellison from The Times and Odette Feldman from the Berliner Tageblatt visited the editorial offices.[8]

Ulviye Mevlan's husband, journalist Mevlanzade Rıfat, also established the magazine Men's World (Turkish Erkekler Dünyası) in order to support women's struggle for rights, although only one issue of the magazine was published.[13]

In 2009, the first 100 issues of Women's World were transliterated into Roman script and republished by the Women's Works Library and Information Center Foundation.[5][4]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Çakır, Serpil (2006). Osmanlı Kadın Hareketi. Metis Yayınları. p. 407.
  2. ^ a b c d Çakır, Serpil (2006). "Mevlan Civelek, Ulviye (1893–1964)". In de Haan, Francisca; Daskalova, Krasimira; Loutfi, Anna (eds.). Biographical Dictionary of Women's Movements and Feminisms in Central, Eastern, and South Eastern Europe : 19th and 20th Centuries (1st ed.). Budapest: Central European University Press. pp. 336–339. ISBN 978-615-5053-72-6. from the original on 18 March 2022. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  3. ^ a b c Çakır, Serpil (2016). Kadınların Özyaşam Öykülerinde Kadınlık ve Öğretmenlik Kimliklerinin Kuruluşu: Emekli Kadın Öğretmenlerle Mikro Düzlemde Bir Sözlü Tarih Çalışması. p. 135.
  4. ^ a b Demircioğlu, Tülay; Büyükkarcı Yılmaz, Fatma (2009). Kadınlar Dünyası: 1. – 50. Sayılar (Yeni Harflerle) 1913–1921. İstanbul: Kadın Eserleri Kütüphanesi ve Bilgi Merkezi Vakfı. ISBN 978-975-8081-25-7.
  5. ^ a b Demircioğlu, Tülay; Büyükkarcı Yılmaz, Fatma (2009). Kadınlar Dünyası: 51. – 100. Sayılar (Yeni Harflerle) 1913–1921. İstanbul: Kadın Eserleri Kütüphanesi ve Bilgi Merkezi Vakfı. ISBN 978-975-8081-25-7.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Tugba Alver (2016), Recasting Late Ottoman Women: Nation, Press and Islam (1876-1914), Wikidata Q110771469
  7. ^ a b Pelin Başci (1 January 2004), ADVERTISING MODERNITY IN WOMEN'S WORLD: WOMEN'S LIFESTYLE AND LEISURE IN LATE-OTTOMAN ISTANBUL, vol. 2, pp. 34–63, doi:10.1163/156920804322888248, Wikidata Q110771470
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Serpil Çakır (1 January 2007). "Feminism and Feminist History-Writing in Turkey: The Discovery of Ottoman Feminism". Aspasia. 1 (1). doi:10.3167/ASP.2007.010104. ISSN 1933-2882. Wikidata Q110771693.
  9. ^ Gürbey Hiz (3 April 2019). "The making of the 'new woman': narratives in the popular illustrated press from the Ottoman Empire to the new Republic (1890–1920s)". Early Popular Visual Culture. 17 (2): 156–177. doi:10.1080/17460654.2019.1669062. ISSN 1746-0654. Wikidata Q110771436.
  10. ^ a b Duygu Koç (2016), Türk Kadın Hareketini Kadınlar Dünyası ve Türk Kadın Yolu Dergileri Üzerinden Okumak (Masters thesis) (in Turkish), Wikidata Q110817388
  11. ^ Çakır, Serpil (2016). Osmanlı Kadın Hareketi. İstanbul: Metis. p. 407. ISBN 978-975-342-044-0.
  12. ^ Ayşe Gül Altınay (7 July 2014). "Centennial challenges: Denationalizing and gendering histories of war and genocide". European Journal of Women's Studies. 21 (3): 307–312. doi:10.1177/1350506814529629D. ISSN 1350-5068. Wikidata Q110771453.
  13. ^ Kutlar, Mithat (2008). Ulviye Mevlan: Yaşamı ve Düşünceleri, yüksek lisans tezi (in Turkish). Ankara University Institute of Social Sciences, Department of Women's Studies. ss. 38, 47.

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Women s World Turkish Kadinlar Dunyasi was a women s magazine that was published in Turkey from 4 April 1913 after the Balkan Wars until 1921 The founder of the magazine was Nuriye Ulviye Mevlan Civelek It was published by women writers in the Ottoman Society for the Defence of Women s Rights Turkish Osmanli Mudafaa i Hukuk i Nisvan Cemiyeti Women s WorldThe writer Yasar Nezihe on the cover of the 124th issue of the Ottoman feminist magazine Kadinlar DunyasiEditor in ChiefEmine Seher Hanim issues 1 108 FrequencyDaily for the first 100 days then weeklyFormat4 pages issues 1 100 16 pages with images by time of final publicationTotal circulation gt 3 000FounderNuriye Ulviye Mevlan CivelekFounded4 April 1913Final issue21 May 1921CountryTurkeyThe magazine s purpose was to increase women s rights and freedoms to raise awareness of women and to enable them to be active in work and social life It was the first explicitly feminist magazine of the Ottoman Empire 1 2 337 and the first to publish photographs of Ottoman Muslim women 2 337 3 The first 100 issues of Women s World copies of which are in the archives of the Women s Works Library and Information Center Foundation were transliterated into Roman script and republished by the foundation in 2009 4 5 Contents 1 Background 2 Founding 3 Publication 4 Contents 5 Closure 6 Reception and legacy 7 See also 8 ReferencesBackground EditBuilding on the societal change that took place through the Tanzimat and the Constitutional Monarchy education beyond primary school became available to women for the first time and women started to be more active in the Turkish press 1 The Ottoman women s movement began to demand rights in particular working to increase women s access to education and paid work to abolish polygamy and to reform dress codes especially with respect to the pece an Islamic veil 1 Founding EditIn April 1913 Nuriye Ulviye Mevlan Civelek founded Women s World magazine with the legacy of her husband Hulusi Bey Civelek also established the Ottoman Society for the Defense of Women s Rights also translated as the Association for the Defence of the Rights of Ottoman Women in Turkish Osmanli Mudafaa i Hukuk i Nisvan Cemiyeti 6 to campaign for new rights and a freer social life for women The association was established either in 1912 7 or 1913 8 Women s World called on all women to fight for their rights with a stated goal to defend the rights and interests of womanhood The first issue of the magazine explained their position Until our rights are recognised in public law until men and women are equal in every profession Kadinlar Dunyasi will not welcome men in its pages Yes some of the Ottoman men defend us Ottoman women We see that and we thank them However we Ottoman women have our own ways and manners and male writers can understand neither this nor our psychology Let them please leave us alone and not make toys for their dreams out of us We can defend our rights by our own efforts Kadinlar Dunyasi Editorial 1913 9 8 Publication EditThe first issue of the magazine was published on 4 April 1913 and it appeared daily for the first hundred issues 2 336 Initially each issue was four pages without pictures After the 100th issue the journal had 16 pages with illustrations and was published weekly 6 The magazine broke new ground as the first to publish photographs of Ottoman Muslim women 2 337 The magazine owned their own printing press and all staff from the editor the writers the typesetters and the printers were women 6 After it was printed in the Serbesti Printing House in Binbirdirek it was distributed centrally in the Marifet Library in Besiktas and then local distribution and sales were made in similar libraries 10 The French influence in the Ottoman Empire was also reflected in the magazine and the French name Monde Feminin was placed on the bottom corner of the cover A French supplement was given for a short time between issues 121 and 128 The reason for this supplement is explained in the magazine as to ensure the mutual dialogue of our brothers and sisters in Europe 3 Although there is no exact information about the circulation of Women s World an advertisement published in the 165th issue gives clues the advertisement announces that 3 000 copies of the magazine will be printed due to paper shortages and that readers should subscribe to avoid the trouble of finding the magazine Considering the war conditions of the period this number is remarkable 1 3 The editor in chief of the magazine was Emine Seher Hanim until the 108th issue 6 Regular contributors included Mukerrem Belkis 6 Atiye Sukran Aliye Cevat Safiye Buran Aziz Haydar 1881 6 Nimet Cemil Meliha Cenan Belkis Sevket Fatma Zerrin Seniye Ata Sacide and Mes adet Bedirhan 10 Haydar also opened and financed a private school for girls 6 Contents EditWomen s World which was written by and for women included a large number of advertisements as well as editorials essays short tales translations and audience letters all of which addressed women s duties and problems 7 In contrast to other magazines aimed at women at the time it drew contributions from women from all sectors of society 8 The focus of the magazine was the visibility of women in social life participation in working life reorganization of the rules on clothing outside the home improving the education of girls providing higher education for women preventing marriages by arrangement and improving the family 6 The magazine which is a pioneering example of the struggle for independent and solidarity women in the Ottoman Empire is noteworthy not only for its openness to women writers but also for its wide coverage of letters from its readers which led to a diversity of viewpoints and the opportunity to respond to readers concerns 8 Closure EditThe Istanbul Library has 204 issues of Women s World in their catalogue 6 The last issue was published on 21 May 1921 8 6 Reception and legacy EditWomen s World advocated a women s revolution that would protect the rights of every woman regardless of nationality religion or social status Considering the nationalist environment of the period triggered especially by the Balkan Wars the importance of this principle can be understood In this respect Women s World differs from other women s publications of the period such as Ladies Mahsus Gazette which were dominated by nationalist rhetoric and that only accepted contributions from intellectual women For this reason Women s World is considered the first feminist publication in the Ottoman Empire 1 Historian Serpil Cakir considers Kadinlar Dunyasi the most radical of the Ottoman women s journals in that it did not allow male writers to write in its columns 8 Women s World uses the word feminism as well as Hukuk i nisvan women s rights and gives wide coverage of discussions on feminism In response to the criticisms directed at the magazine by men that feminism is a word of foreign origin and therefore not a concept belonging to this culture it replied that words such as telegraph and tram are not Turkish but are adopted and used by everyone 8 11 Women s World advocated for women s rights in general but also ran campaigns on specific issues As a result of one such campaign seven women telephone operators were employed at the national telephone company 6 A campaign centred around Women s World to allow women access to higher education led directly to the opening of The Women s University Inas Darulfununu now a part of Istanbul University in September 1914 followed by the Academy of Fine Arts for Women Inas Sanayi i Nefise Mektebi 12 The magazine received attention congratulations and encouragement from the foreign press and reporters Grace Ellison from The Times and Odette Feldman from the Berliner Tageblatt visited the editorial offices 8 Ulviye Mevlan s husband journalist Mevlanzade Rifat also established the magazine Men s World Turkish Erkekler Dunyasi in order to support women s struggle for rights although only one issue of the magazine was published 13 In 2009 the first 100 issues of Women s World were transliterated into Roman script and republished by the Women s Works Library and Information Center Foundation 5 4 See also EditWomen in Turkey Education in TurkeyReferences Edit a b c d e Cakir Serpil 2006 Osmanli Kadin Hareketi Metis Yayinlari p 407 a b c d Cakir Serpil 2006 Mevlan Civelek Ulviye 1893 1964 In de Haan Francisca Daskalova Krasimira Loutfi Anna eds Biographical Dictionary of Women s Movements and Feminisms in Central Eastern and South Eastern Europe 19th and 20th Centuries 1st ed Budapest Central European University Press pp 336 339 ISBN 978 615 5053 72 6 Archived from the original on 18 March 2022 Retrieved 18 March 2022 a b c Cakir Serpil 2016 Kadinlarin Ozyasam Oykulerinde Kadinlik ve Ogretmenlik Kimliklerinin Kurulusu Emekli Kadin Ogretmenlerle Mikro Duzlemde Bir Sozlu Tarih Calismasi p 135 a b Demircioglu Tulay Buyukkarci Yilmaz Fatma 2009 Kadinlar Dunyasi 1 50 Sayilar Yeni Harflerle 1913 1921 Istanbul Kadin Eserleri Kutuphanesi ve Bilgi Merkezi Vakfi ISBN 978 975 8081 25 7 a b Demircioglu Tulay Buyukkarci Yilmaz Fatma 2009 Kadinlar Dunyasi 51 100 Sayilar Yeni Harflerle 1913 1921 Istanbul Kadin Eserleri Kutuphanesi ve Bilgi Merkezi Vakfi ISBN 978 975 8081 25 7 a b c d e f g h i j k Tugba Alver 2016 Recasting Late Ottoman Women Nation Press and Islam 1876 1914 Wikidata Q110771469 a b Pelin Basci 1 January 2004 ADVERTISING MODERNITY IN WOMEN S WORLD WOMEN S LIFESTYLE AND LEISURE IN LATE OTTOMAN ISTANBUL vol 2 pp 34 63 doi 10 1163 156920804322888248 Wikidata Q110771470 a b c d e f g h Serpil Cakir 1 January 2007 Feminism and Feminist History Writing in Turkey The Discovery of Ottoman Feminism Aspasia 1 1 doi 10 3167 ASP 2007 010104 ISSN 1933 2882 Wikidata Q110771693 Gurbey Hiz 3 April 2019 The making of the new woman narratives in the popular illustrated press from the Ottoman Empire to the new Republic 1890 1920s Early Popular Visual Culture 17 2 156 177 doi 10 1080 17460654 2019 1669062 ISSN 1746 0654 Wikidata Q110771436 a b Duygu Koc 2016 Turk Kadin Hareketini Kadinlar Dunyasi ve Turk Kadin Yolu Dergileri Uzerinden Okumak Masters thesis in Turkish Wikidata Q110817388 Cakir Serpil 2016 Osmanli Kadin Hareketi Istanbul Metis p 407 ISBN 978 975 342 044 0 Ayse Gul Altinay 7 July 2014 Centennial challenges Denationalizing and gendering histories of war and genocide European Journal of Women s Studies 21 3 307 312 doi 10 1177 1350506814529629D ISSN 1350 5068 Wikidata Q110771453 Kutlar Mithat 2008 Ulviye Mevlan Yasami ve Dusunceleri yuksek lisans tezi in Turkish Ankara University Institute of Social Sciences Department of Women s Studies ss 38 47 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Women 27s World Ottoman magazine amp oldid 1091924718, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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