Aslı Erdoğan

Aslı Erdoğan (born 8 March 1967) is a prize-winning Turkish writer, human rights activist, and columnist for Özgür Gündem and formerly for Radikal. Her second novel has been published in English.[1][2] She was awarded the 2018 Simone de Beauvoir Prize.

Aslı Erdoğan
Erdoğan in 2017
Born (1967-03-08) 8 March 1967
Istanbul, Turkey
OccupationWriter and human rights activist
NationalityTurkish
Alma materRobert College
Boğaziçi University
Notable awardsD. Welle Story Awards (1997)
Sait Faik Story Awards (2010)
Tucholsky Award (2016)

Early years

Born in Istanbul, she graduated from Robert College in 1983 and the Computer Engineering Department of Boğaziçi University in 1988. She worked at CERN as a particle physicist from 1991 to 1993 and received an MSc in physics from Boğaziçi University as a result of her research there. She began research for a PhD in physics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil before returning to Turkey to become a full-time writer in 1996.[3]

Writing career

Her first story, The Final Farewell Note, won third prize in the 1990 Yunus Nadi Writing Competition. Her first novel, Kabuk Adam (Crust Man), was published in 1994 and was followed in 1996 by Mucizevi Mandarin (Miraculous Mandarin) a series of interconnected short stories. Her short story Wooden Birds received first prize from Deutsche Welle radio in a 1997 competition and her second novel, Kırmızı Pelerinli Kent (The City in Crimson Cloak), received numerous accolades abroad and has been published in English translation.[3]

She was the Turkish representative of PEN International's Writers in Prison Committee from 1998 to 2000. She also wrote a column entitled The Others for the Turkish newspaper Radikal, the articles from which were later collected and published as the book Bir Yolculuk Ne Zaman Biter (When a Journey Ends) and featured in the 2004 edition of M.E.E.T.'s journal.[4]

She is widely traveled and has an interest in anthropology and Native American culture.

From December 2011 to May 2012, at the invitation of the Literaturhaus Zürich and the PWG Foundation,[5] Erdoğan was Zürich's "writer in residence".

She was a writer-in-resident for the ICORN in Kraków, Poland in 2016. After her return to Turkey, she continued to write for the pro-Kurdish daily Özgür Gündem.[6]

Arrest

Demonstration in support of Aslı Erdoğan, Kraków, September 2016

Aslı Erdoğan was taken under custody during the police raid on Özgür Gündem on 16 August 2016. She was detained on 17 August 2016 for being a member of the advisory board of the newspaper.[7][8] On 20 August, she was arrested and jailed for pretrial detention.[9] Özgür Gündem was quickly succeeded by Özgürlükçü Demokrasi ("Libertarian democracy"), which featured a daily column called "Aslı’s Friends".[10]

English language bibliography

Two of Erdoğan's works are available in English translation.

The City in Crimson Cloak

The City in Crimson Cloak (Turkish title: Kırmızı Pelerinli Kent) is a 1998 novel by Turkish writer Aslı Erdoğan, which was republished in 2007 by Soft Skull Press in English translation by Amy Spangler.[1]

Özgür, the young Turkish protagonist of the story, having deserted her past and secluded herself from outer world, is poor, hungry, and on the verge of a mental breakdown. She has a single weapon left in the all-out war she has declared against Rio de Janeiro: to write the city, which has trapped her and robbed her of everything.

Amy Benfer, writing for Barnes & Noble, states, "The novel might have been richer had Erdoğan taken advantage of the structure to interrogate Özgür's motives and perceptions more fully than Özgür herself can. But it does succeed as a sort of reverse postcard - the hazards of the tropics seen in the eyes of a woman from winter climes."[11]

Editions

  • The City in Crimson Cloak. trans. Amy Spangler. New York: Soft Skull Press. 2007. ISBN 1-933368-74-8.CS1 maint: others (link)

The Stone Building and Other Places

The Stone Building and Other Places is a collection of three short stories and a novella ("The Morning Visitor," "The Wooden Birds," "The Prison," and The Stone Building).[12] The collection has become a best seller in Turkey.[13]

The interconnected short stories feature women whose lives have been interrupted by forces beyond their control: exile, serious illness, and the imprisonment of loved ones. These tales culminate in the novella; the "stone building" is a metaphor for the various oppressive institutions—prisons, police HQ's, hospitals, and psychiatric asylums—that dominate the lives of the characters.

Editions

  • The Stone Building and Other Places. Trans. Sevinç Türkkan. San Francisco: City Lights. 2018. ISBN 978-0-87286-750-5.

On-line translations

  • Wooden Birds by Aslı Erdoğan at Boğaziçi University[14] and Words Without Borders[15]
  • Extract from Miraculous Mandarin by Aslı Erdoğan at Boğaziçi University[16]

Awards and Honors

European Cultural Foundation Princes Margriet Award for Culture, Amsterdam, Netherlands - May 9th, 2017
  • European Cultural Foundation, Princes Margriet Award for Culture, Amsterdam, Netherlands, May 2017
  • Bruno Kreisky Prize for Human Rights, Vienna, Austria, 2017
  • Theodor Heuss Medal, Germany, 2017
  • Stuttgart Peace Prize, Stuttgart, 2017
  • PEN-Tucholsky Prize, Sweden, 2017
  • Erich Maria Remarque Peace Prize, Germany, 2017
  • Leipzig Prize for Press Freedom, Germany, 2017
  • Simone de Beauvoir Prize for Human Rights, Paris 2018
gollark: #13 is clearly yours, though, as it has words like "continuation-passing style" and "tail recursion" in it.
gollark: ```python for _ in range(m - len(str(x))): s = "0" + s```I mean, Python almost certainly has a function for this already.
gollark: #16 is oddly nonidiomatic, and not just because of the whole "makes `ls` do all the sorting" thing.
gollark: They're not in this.
gollark: I wonder who wrote #14, the weird bitshifty one.

References

  1. "The City in Crimson Cloak". Soft Skull Press. Archived from the original on 2009-10-17. Retrieved 2009-10-24.
  2. "Aslı Erdoğan". Bogazici University. Archived from the original on 2005-11-13. Retrieved 2009-10-24.
  3. "Aslı Erdoğan". Unionsverlag. Retrieved 2009-10-24.
  4. "Aslı Erdoğan". International PEN. Archived from the original on 2008-03-27. Retrieved 2009-10-24.
  5. "Stiftung PWG - Home". www.pwg.ch. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
  6. "Asli Erdogan detained in Turkey". ICORN. 2016-08-18. Archived from the original on 2016-10-01. Retrieved 2016-08-21.
  7. "Özgür Gündem Yazarı Aslı Erdoğan gözaltında". Evrensel (in Turkish). 2016-08-17. Retrieved 2016-08-21.
  8. "Aslı Erdoğan". WritersNet. Archived from the original on 2008-08-29. Retrieved 2009-10-24.
  9. "Turkey arrests novelist Aslı Erdoğan over 'terror' charges". Hürriyet Daily News. 2016-08-20. Retrieved 2016-08-21.
  10. "Turkey: renowned author and activist Aslı Erdoğan imprisoned". English PEN. 22 August 2016. Retrieved 30 August 2016.
  11. Benfer, Amy. "The City in Crimson Cloak". barnesandnoble.com. Retrieved 2010-09-02.
  12. ""The Stone Building" and the Post Coup Erdoğan Crackdown". www.counterpunch.org. 2016-10-13. Retrieved 2017-05-02.
  13. Arango, Tim (2017-03-02). "Torn Ballet Shoes, and a Life Upended". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2017-05-02.
  14. "Works". November 22, 2005. Archived from the original on November 22, 2005. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
  15. Erdogan, Asli. "Wooden Birds". Words Without Borders. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
  16. "Works". November 12, 2005. Archived from the original on November 12, 2005. Retrieved August 26, 2019.

Further reading

  • İmşir, Şirma Begüm (2013). Dictionary of Literary Biography: Post-1960 Novelists in Turkey (Volume 379 ed.). Gale Cengage Learning, Bruccoli Clark. pp. 87–92. ISBN 9780787696542.

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