Yasar Kemal |
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Yasar Kemal is the pen name of the Turkish writer Kemal Sadık Gökçeli (born 1923, Adana). When he was five, Kemal lost his father, and had to shoulder the responsibility of providing a living for his family. From early ages onwards, he took up various jobs; he was a cotton plant worker, a night watchman, a tractor operator, and a library clerk. The library job probably had much influence on his future career in literature, as it provided him ample opportunity to read, and fed his interest in literature. In the 1940s, Kemal discovered the journal Çığ, which was published in Adana, and this became his official initiation into the world of literature. During these years, he built up an immense interest towards folk literature, and traveled through countless villages to collect tales and stories. In 1943, he published these in his first book Ağıtlar. The 1950s witnessed the transition of Turkish society from an agricultural to an industrial one, and the lifestyle of Anatolian villages changed as well. Kemal was interested in portraying the conflicts of people stuck between traditional values and the dynamics of industrialization. From 1953 to 1954, his novel İnce Memed was published in the Cumhuriyet Newspaper in an installment form, and it drew a lot of attention. The hero, İnce Memed fights against the oppressive forces of wealth, embodied in the Ağa, the feudal lord of large stretches of land. Memed divides up the land among the villagers in equity, kills the Ağa, and retreats to the mountain, assuming the identity of a bandit. This is how he becomes the champion of the people. Kemal’s İnce Memed is an imaginary character created by the necessity for justice and hope. The epic novel İnce Memed is special not because of its unique content, but also because of the novelty that it brought to form. Just like all of Kemal’s other works, İnce Memed draws its sources from legends and myths. It is an indeed an epic but it has all the sophistication, and the literary approach of a novel. İnce Memed is a legendary masterpiece that has been translated into forty languages, and has been internationally printed over 140 times. During the Yasar Kemal Symposium held in 2003, in Bilkent University, the author talked about the harsh conditions in which he composed this novel: “It was one of the coldest Istanbul winters ever. I had no money to put wood in the stove. Yet, I just pretended that the fire was going strong; I covered myself in a ripped blanket, and typed away on an old typewriter that was missing many keys. That’s how I wrote the İnce Memed, and this novel is the best memory I kept from that house I could not pay the rent to.” Most of Kemal’s work carries traces of Anatolian folk literature. He composed his works by bringing the legends and tales of Anatolia to the reality of his day. This makes Kemal’s work significant not only for Turkish literature but also for world literature. No doubt, Ince Memed is not Kemal’s only major success. His novel Yer Demir Gök Bakır, which has been made into a movie, is a tale of black humor, which portrays the efforts of a villager to find a way out of exasperation, and hopelessness. Immobilized by monotony, the villager finds his salvation in creating his own myths and legends, hence peculiar and supernatural events take place in the village where the novel is staged, and eventually, the village dweller finds himself believing his own lies. At first glance, the author appears to be telling a story that seems harmless enough, but at a deeper level, he is also communicating all of the bitterness of hidden despair and helplessness. Most of Kemal’s characters are Anatolian village people who are weary and angry in the face of the oppression they experience. Kemal opens his novels with prolonged descriptions of nature and surroundings. Hence, he draws his readers into an environment that he knows quite well, and the descriptive elements make the reader feel right at home. Another trademark achievement of the author is the neologisms that he contributed to the Turkish Language. Because he is a wordmonger in the real sense, reading and studying his works is a special pleasure. His works not only allow the reader to discover new worlds, but they also take the reader into a brand new language. Hence Kemal is one of the most prominent authors of Turkish literature who ought to be read for enjoyment. The Works of Yasar Kemal:
Short Stories: Sarı Sıcak (Yellow Heat 1952)
* Biographical information concerning Kemal Tahir has been gathered from Tanzimat’tan Bugüne Edebiyatçılar Ansiklopedisi. |

