Turkish Language and Literature
The Turkish
language belongs to the Altay branch of the Uralo-Altay linguistic
family. Through the span of history, Turks have spread over a wide
geographical area, taking their language with them. Turkish speaking
people have lived in a wide area stretching form today's Mongolia to the
north coast of the Black Sea, the Balkans, East Europe, Anatolia, Iraq
and a wide area of northern Africa. Various dialects and accents have
emerged from these distances. The history of the language is divided
into three main groups, old Turkish (from the 7th to the 13th
centuries), mid-Turkish (from the 13th to the 20th), and new Turkish
from the 20th century onwards. During the five centuries of the Ottoman
Empire period, Arabic and Persian words as well as words from other
languages were assimilated into the Turkish language. The natural
development of the Turkish language was severely hampered during this
time.
The "new
language" movement began in 1928, five years after the proclamation of
the Republic, and the Arabic alphabet was replaced by the Latin one. The
new language movement also sought to rid the language of foreign words.
The Turkish Language Institute was established in 1932 to carry out
linguistic research and contribute to the natural development of the
language. As a consequence of these efforts, modern Turkish is a
literary and cultural language developing naturally and free of foreign
influences.
The history of
Turkish literature may be divided into three periods reflecting the
history of Turkish civilization:
Before the
Adoption of Islam
The Islamic
Period
The Period
Under Western Influence
A Turkish
Legend
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