Diyojen Explained

Editor:Teodor Kasap
Category:Satire
Frequency:Weekly
Founder:Teodor Kasap
Firstdate:24 November 1870
Finaldate:1873
Country:Ottoman Empire
Based:Istanbul
Language:Ottoman Turkish

Diyojen (“Diogenes“) was the first Ottoman satirical magazine of the Ottoman Empire. The first issue was published in Istanbul on 24 November 1870[1] by the satirist Teodor Kasap (1835-1905).[2] The caricatures published in Diyojen appeared without signs of the artists.[3] It came out weekly in three year's issues and was banned for good in 1873 after 183 numbers.[4] Apart from satirical pieces, the magazine became known for its caricatures and the translation of French literature. Kasap, who also worked as journalist and playwright, published other satirical magazines after the ban. In Hayal (“Fantasy” or “Illusion“), which existed from 1873 until 1877, he among other things used caricatures and satirical articles to criticize the arbitrary press law.[4]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Diyojen, 1st volume, 1st issue, 12. Teşrin-i Sânî 1286.
  2. Ipek K. Yosmaoğlu. Chasing the Printed Word: Press Censorship in the Ottoman Empire, 1876-1913. The Turkish Studies Association Journal. 2003. 27. 1–2. 20. 43383672.
  3. Efrat E. Aviv. Cartoons in Turkey – From Abdülhamid to Erdoğan. Middle Eastern Studies. 2013. 49. 2. 223. 10.1080/00263206.2012.759101 . 146388882 .
  4. Tobias Heinzelmann. (1999). Die Balkankrise in der osmanischen Karikatur: Die Satirezeitschriften Karagöz, Kalem und Cem 1908–1914, Stuttgart: Steiner.