89. Today in 1920s Turkey: 31 May 1923 (Form Letters for Lovers)

Yasemin Gencer
2 min readMay 31, 2017

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Cartoon by Ratip Tahir (Burak), published in Akbaba, 31 May 1923, no. 51, page 4.

English
Love Letters of Today
I began with “My Dear Soul” and finished with “My Dear Soul.” I wonder which one I should send this letter to, that one or the other?!..

Türkçe
Şimdiki aşk mektupları
Sevgili ruhum diye başladım, sevgili ruhum diye bitirdim. Acaba bu mektubu hangisine göndersem, ona mı, ötekisine mi?!..

Comments:
This cartoon features a young, slender flapper girl struggling with the age-old question of selecting the recipient for the love letter she’s already written. The content of the love letter is obscured by the fact that we only know that this person is referred to as “My Dear Soul.” Rather than signifying love for the beloved, perhaps it points to the young lady’s infatuation with herself as experienced through the affection she receives from her lovers. It also negates the sincerity of whatever words were couched between the two sets of “My Dear Souls.” How genuine could the sentiments conveyed in the letter be if they can be applied to more than one person? This young lady has essentially created a “form letter,” in the modern sense of the word, for her lovers. Anyone who has ever been rejected from a job application knows about these… The letters that attempt to make you feel like an individual but that you know are mass-produced and not written specifically with you in mind…

Yet I digress. I especially wanted to share this cartoon because I found it to be very pleasing to the eye. Perhaps you might agree. Here’s why: Most striking is the strong graphic line and the composition’s overall balance. The interweaving of bold curves with strict right angles strikes an equilibrium between soft and hard lines that is extremely satisfying. Moreover, the form of the woman’s body is sleek and elegant. Her face and the tilt of her neck are reminiscent of ancient Greek sculptures. Lastly, the distribution of color blocks (e.g. skirt, hair, table-top, chair, foreground, wall) and patterns (e.g. waste basket, chair cushion, baseboard) creates an aesthetic rhythm that comforts the mind and eye.

Entire page, Akbaba, 31 May 1923, no. 51, page 4. Atatürk Library, Istanbul.

Originally published at https://steemit.com on May 31, 2017.

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Yasemin Gencer

I am a scholar of Islamic art and civilization specializing in the history of Ottoman and modern Turkish art and print culture.