Haliloğlu, Nagihan

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İnsan ve Toplum Bilimleri Fakültesi, Karşılaştırmalı Edebiyat Bölümü
Karşılaştırmalı Edebiyat Bölümü’nün vizyonu, özellikle Avrupa ve Orta Doğu dillerinde yazılmış eserleri hem birbirleriyle hem de Türk Edebiyatı’yla mukayese ederek, medeniyetlerin geçişkenliği hakkında bilgi üretmek ve farkındalık yaratmaktır. Eleştirel bakış açısının temel alınacağı Bölümde, edebiyat, dil, kültür, sinema alanlarındaki gelişmeleri yakından takip edip, tartışmalara katkı sağlayacak bilim insanları yetiştirmeyi hedeflemektedir.

Adı Soyadı

Nagihan Haliloğlu

İlgi Alanları

Area Studies Social Sciences , Religion Literature Government & Law

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Listeleniyor 1 - 4 / 4
  • Yayın
    [Book Review]: "Modernism, Empire, World Literature"
    (Oxford University Press, 2022) Haliloğlu, Nagihan; İnsan ve Toplum Bilimleri Fakültesi, Karşılaştırmalı Edebiyat Bölümü; İnsan ve Toplum Bilimleri Fakültesi, Karşılaştırmalı Edebiyat Bölümü
    Readers approaching a book entitled Modernism, Empire, World Literature will have their own understanding of what ‘modernism’ and ‘world’ mean in relation to ‘literature’. A quick look at the book’s contents page reveals that for Joe Cleary, the world is comprised of England, Ireland, and the USA, with the Caribbean thrown in to round up the ‘empire’. The volume is divided into chapters that offer what seem, at least to this reader, to be separate and well-informed expositions of works of literature such as The Golden Bowl (1904), The Waste Land (1922), Ulysses (1922), The Great Gatsby (1925), and Long Day’s Journey into the Night (1956), with Omeros (1990) providing the imperial coda at the end. ‘Empire’, as described in the book, is a burden that England has relinquished to the USA, a crown that sits uneasily on the usurper’s head. Modernism, Empire, World Literature operates on the centre–periphery binary...
  • Yayın
    [Book Review]: "E. Khayyat, Istanbul 1940 and Global Modernity: The World According to Auerbach, Tanpinar, and Edib"
    (İlmi Etüdler Derneği, 2020) Haliloğlu, Nagihan; İnsan ve Toplum Bilimleri Fakültesi, Karşılaştırmalı Edebiyat Bölümü; İnsan ve Toplum Bilimleri Fakültesi, Karşılaştırmalı Edebiyat Bölümü
    [No Abstract Available]
  • Yayın
    Ottoman chronotope for the mediterranean in Evliya Çelebi’s seventeenth-century travelogue Seyahatname
    (University of Malta, 2017) Haliloğlu, Nagihan; İnsan ve Toplum Bilimleri Fakültesi, Karşılaştırmalı Edebiyat Bölümü
    This article investigates the ways in which the Ottoman traveller Evliya Çelebi perceived and represented the various political powers and cultural heritages in the Mediterranean, through a reading of his seventeenth-century travelogue, Seyahatname. I argue that Evliya’s text reveals the palimpsest of political power and cultural hegemony extant in the Mediterranean of his time and attempts to legitimise Ottoman rule, employing several tropes and narrative threads. For Evliya, the Mediterranean is primarily a battlefield that has witnessed the victories and defeats of the Ottomans throughout their history. Evliya’s Seyahatame, in that sense, is within the tradition of travel writing in the service of imperial meaning-making and meaning-sustaining processes. I call the narrative structure under which Evliya’s observations are gathered the Ottoman Chronotope: a chronotope that highlights the project of sustaining a commonwealth, through ties of commerce and faith. In Evliya’s text the islands become a geography where the Ottomans’ sense of mission and empire is bolstered by ‘old books’ and oral narratives that he claims were popular particularly among the Mediterranean Greek population.
  • Yayın
    The failed asabiyya and cultural suicide in Michel Houellebecq's submission [extended abstract]
    (İlmi Etüdler Derneği, 2021) Haliloğlu, Nagihan; İnsan ve Toplum Bilimleri Fakültesi, Karşılaştırmalı Edebiyat Bölümü; İnsan ve Toplum Bilimleri Fakültesi, Karşılaştırmalı Edebiyat Bölümü
    Since 1994, contemporary French novelist Michel Houellebecq has been offering projections for the future where the European culture and way of life come to an end. The aim of this article is to analyze his 2015 novel Submission using concepts developed by Ibn Khaldun and to show what kind of a political project Houellebecq’s novel serves. Europe, or the Occident as Houellebecq likes to put it, as described in his novels is always being threatened by barbarians at the gates, and these barbarians almost always come from the Mediterranean. With refugee crises, Europe has indeed become wary of Mediterranean passages, and Houellebecq describes how the sea has become an uncontrollable border. Houellebecq’s novels always invite us to question the borders of the Mediterranean. This article studies the novels of a French author who claims the Greeks and the Romans as his heritage through the work of Ibn Khaldun, another author of Mediterranean heritage this time from Andalusia. In this sense, studying Houellebecq with Ibn Khaldun contributes to the discipline of provincializing Europe.