Ahmet Hasim

The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Ahmet Hasim

 

Born 1884 in Baghdad; died June 4, 1933, in Istanbul. Turkish writer; initiator of symbolism in Turkish poetry.

Ahmet Haşim’s works have been printed since 1901. He collaborated in the “Approaching Dawn” literary circle, in which an attempt was made to revive the traditions of the “Serveti Fünun” and to create a Turkish neoclassicism which was to combine the form of classical poetry with the ideas of Western “pure art.” Ahmet Haşim wrote in the aruz meter. He stood for the simplification of the Turkish language. His principal themes were love and nature, and his verse occasionally reflects melancholy, despondency, and a striving to withdraw from society. He published the collections of verse Hours Spent at the Lake (1921) and The Cup (1 926), as well as travel sketches.

REFERENCES

Al’kaeva, L. O. Ocherki po istorii turetskoi literatury, 1908–1939. Moscow, 1959.
APkaeva, L., and A. Babaev. Turetskaia literatura. Moscow, 1967.
Yetkin, S. K. Ahmet Haşim ve sembolizm. Ankara, 1938.
Hisar, A. ş. Ahmet Haşim, şiiri ve hayhati. Istanbul, 1962.
Bezirci, A. Ahmet Haşim, Inceleme. Istanbul, 1967.
Jaşar, Nabi. Ahmet Haşim, Hayati, Sanati eserler. Istanbul, 1968.

KH. A. CHOREKCHIAN

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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