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Livres anciens et modernes

Mehmet Sevket Eygi, (1933-2019).

[UTOPIA / CRITICISM OF ISLAM] Dar-ür-rahat Müslümanlarina hitap. [i.e. Addressing the Muslims of the Comfortable Land].

Bugün Gazetesi Nesriyati, 1967

325,00 €

Khalkedon Books, IOBA, ESA Bookshop

(Istanbul, Turquie)

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Détails

Année
1967
Lieu d'édition
Istanbul
Auteur
Mehmet Sevket Eygi, (1933-2019).
Pages
0
Éditeurs
Bugün Gazetesi Nesriyati
Format
8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" tall
Edition
1st Edition
Thème
Middle East, Islamica, Philosophy & Sociology
Description
Soft cover
Etat de conservation
Tres bonne condition
Reliure
Couverture souple
Premiére Edition
Oui

Description

Original wrappers. 12mo. (16 x 12 cm). In Turkish. 16 p.  First and only edition of this extremely rare pamphlet written by Turkish Islamist-Nationalist journalist Eygi, who criticizes the understanding of Islam in the 1960s, through the symbol of the first fictional utopian land and vision in Turkish literature called "Darürrahat" [i.e. The Door of Peace] in Ismail Gaspirinskiy (1851-1914)'s book "Darürrahat Müslümanlari" [i.e. The Muslims of Darrürrahat] published in 1887, in Kazan.  Mehmed Sevket Eygi was a Turkish journalist, writer, columnist, and Holocaust denier. He had Islamist-nationalist views. After graduating from university in 1956, he worked as a translator at the Directorate of Religious Affairs for two years. Eygi began publishing the daily Bugün newspaper and its publishing house in 1966, where this book will also be published as the third book of the publishing house.  While making this criticism, he used the first utopia text of Turkish literature called "Darürrahat Muslims" by Gaspirinskiy as a symbol. Ismail Gaspirinskiy (or Gaspirali) was an ideologist, author, journalist, publisher, educator, and major. Gaspirali's work called Muslims of Darurrahat (Comfortable Country) was published in 1891 after the first issuance in Tercuman Newspaper as the continuation of Letters of Frengistan.  Cannot be found in any data as well as OCLC. (Utopias from the Middle East 1).

Lingue: Turkish
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