- Oktay Rıfat Horozcu
-
Oktay Rıfat Horozcu Born June 10, 1914
Trabzon, TurkeyDied April 18, 1988 (aged 73)
Istanbul, TurkeyTurkish
literatureBy category Epic tradition Orhon
Dede Korkut · KöroğluFolk tradition Ottoman era Poetry · Prose
Republican era Oktay Rifat Horozcu, better known as Oktay Rifat, (10 June 1914 – 18 April 1988) was a Turkish writer and playwright, and one of the forefront poets of modern Turkish poetry since the late 1930s. He was the founder of the Garip movement, together with Orhan Veli and Melih Cevdet.
Oktay Rifat had a great influence on modern Turkish poetry, standing outside traditional poetic conventions and creating a new movement.
Contents
Early life
Oktay Rifat was born on 10 June 1914 in the city of Trabzon, son of poet and linguist Samih Rifat Horozcu, who was also governor of Trabzon.[1]
He graduated from Ankara Erkek Lisesi (Ankara Highschool) in 1932, and completed a Bachelor of Law from the University of Ankara. He was appointed to Paris, France by the State Ministry to do his PhD, however came back after three years without completing his degree due to outbreak of World War II.
He moved to Istanbul in 1955, and started to work as a legal adviser for the Turkish State Railways in 1961. He retired in 1973, and died in Istanbul on 18 April 1988. He was interred at Karacaahmet Cemetery in Üsküdar district of Istanbul.
Career
Oktay Rifat started writing poetry as a high school student, and his first poems were published between 1936 and 1944 in the literature journal Varlık (Existence).
In 1941, together with his friends Orhan Veli Kanık and Melih Cevdet Anday, he published the famous book Garip, which formed the first example of the Garip, or 'Strange' movement.[1]
His poems, which use all the richness of his native Turkish language, include Karga ile Tilki (The Crow and the Fox), for which he won the Yeditepe Poetry Prize in 1955. His work rejected older, complex forms, favouring simplicity and fresh rhythms.[2]
Oktay Rifat also published novels such as Bir Kadının Penceresinden (Through a Woman’s Window) and Danaburnu (Calf Nose), theatre plays such as Kadınlar Arasında (Among Women, first staged in 1948) and translated older works into Turkish from Latin and Greek.[1]
Bibliography
- Garip (with Orhan Veli and Melih Cevdet, 1941)
- Yaşayıp Ölmek Aşk ve Avarelik Üstüne Şiirler (1945)
- Güzelleme (1945)
- Aşağı Yukarı (1952)
- Karga ile Tilki (1954)
- Perçemli Sokak (1956)
- Âşık Merdiveni (1958)
- İkilik (Aşağı Yukarı ve Karga ile Tilki'nin ikinci baskısı,1963)
- Elleri Var Özgürlüğün (1966)
- Şiirler (1969)
- Yeni Şiirler (1973)
- Çobanıl Şiirler (1976)
- Bir Cıgara İçimi (1979)
- Elifli (1980)
- Denize Doğru Konuşma (1982)
- Dilsiz ve Çıplak (1984)
- Koca Bir Yaz (1987)
- Bütün Şiirleri (1991)
Awards
- 1954 Yeditepe Poetry Award - for Karga ile Tilki
- 1970 Türkish Language Institute Poetry Award - for his book Şiirler (Poems)
- 1970 Ankara ArtLovers Foundation Best Play of the Year and TRT Art Awards Competition Best Talent Award for his theatre play called Yağmur Sıkıntısı (Oppressive Air)
- 1980 Sedat Simavi Foundation Award - for poetry in the book Bir Cigara İçimi (Smoking a Cigarette)
- 1984 Necatigil Poetry Award- for his book Dilsiz ve Çıplak' (Mute and Naked)
- 1980 Madaralı Roman Award - for his novel Danaburnu
References
- ^ a b c :: Republic Of Turkey Ministry Of Culture And Tourism ::[dead link]
- ^ Graham Fawcett (editor), New Anvil Poets (1990), p. 142.
External links
Turkish Literature Folk Aşık Mahzuni Şerif · Âşık Veysel Şatıroğlu · Dadaloğlu · Erzurumlu Emrah · Gevheri · Hacı Bektaş-ı Veli · Karacaoğlan · Kaygusuz Abdal · Nasreddin · Neşet Ertaş · Pir Sultan Abdal · Seyrani · Yunus EmreMedieval and
OttomanImadaddin Nasimi · Fuzûlî · Bâkî · Nef‘î · Nedîm · Şeyh Gâlib · Evliya Çelebi · Kâtib Çelebi · Yirmisekiz Mehmed Çelebi · Aşık Çelebi · Ziya Pasha · Şemsettin Sami · Namık Kemal · Ahmed Midhat Efendi · Tevfik Fikret · Cenâb Şehâbeddîn · Halit Ziya Uşaklıgil · Ahmet Haşim · Ömer Seyfettin · Mehmet Emin Yurdakul · Ali Canip Yöntem · Mirza Habib Esfahani · Fatma Aliye TopuzContemporary Halide Edip Adıvar · Reşat Nuri Güntekin · Yakup Kadri Karaosmanoğlu · Mehmet Fuat Köprülü · Cevat Şakir Kabaağaçlı · Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar · Orhan Kemal · Murathan Mungan · Orhan Hançerlioğlu · Samim Kocagöz · Semiha Ayverdi · Tarık Buğra · Yusuf Atılgan · Yaşar Kemal · Fakir Baykurt · Bilge Karasu · Oğuz Atay · Tomris Uyar · Ahmet Altan · Orhan Pamuk · Elif Şafak · Memduh Şevket Esendal · Kenan Hulusi Koray · Sait Faik Abasıyanık · Kemal Tahir · Haldun Taner · Aziz Nesin · Suut Kemal Yetkin · Sabahattin Ali · Kemal Bilbaşar · Cemil Meriç · Ruşen Eşref Ünaydın · Nurullah Ataç · Behçet Necatigil · Necati Cumalı · Ayfer Tunç · Yekta Kopan · Ahmet Kutsi Tecer · Şevket Süreyya Aydemir · Mehmet Emin Yurdakul · Ziya Gökalp · Orhan Veli Kanık · Oktay Rıfat Horozcu · Melih Cevdet Anday · Nazım Hikmet · Rıfat Ilgaz · Cemal Süreya · İlhan Berk · Turgut Uyar · Edip Cansever · Ece Ayhan Çağlar · Sezai Karakoç · Tevfik Akdağ · Ülkü Tamer · Neyzen Tevfik · Ahmet Haşim · Yahya Kemal Beyatlı · Abdülhak Şinasi Hisar · Orhan Seyfi Orhon · Enis Behiç Koryürek · Halit Fahri Ozansoy · Yusuf Ziya Ortaç · Muammer Lütfi Bakşi · Necip Fazıl Kısakürek · Vasfi Mahir Kocayürek · Sabri Esat Siyavuşgil · Cevdet Kudret · Yaşar Nabi Nayır · Ahmet Muhip Dıranas · Cahit Sıtkı Tarancı · Ziya Osman Saba · Faik Baysal · Salah Birsel · Özdemir Asaf · N. Abbas Sayar · Can Yücel · Attilâ İlhan · Güven Turan · İsmet Özel · Cem Uzungüneş · Mehmet Altun · Mehmet Erte · Küçük İskender · Faruk Nafiz Çamlıbel · Fazıl Hüsnü Dağlarca · Yusuf Atılgan · Murat Gülsoy · Ayşe Kulin · Yılmaz OnayCategories:- Burials at Karacaahmet Cemetery
- Turkish poets
- Ankara University alumni
- 1914 births
- 1988 deaths
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.