Kalem (magazine) explained

Editor:Lucien Sciuto
Frequency:Weekly
Founded:1908
Firstdate:September 1908
Finaldate:June 1911
Country:Ottoman Empire
Based:Istanbul

Kalem (Ottoman Turkish: Pen) was a bilingual weekly political satire magazine which was in circulation in the period 1908–1911 in Istanbul, Ottoman Empire.[1] The magazine was one of the satirical publications which were started immediately after the end of Ottoman Sultan Abdulhamid's strict rule. It was published in Turkish and French languages and was one of the most notable satirical magazines in the Empire in terms of the quality cartoons.[2] In addition, it is the first Ottoman publication which employed the word cartoon and attempted to develop a definition for it.

History and profile

Kalem was established in Istanbul in 1908 as a bilingual satirical magazine covering both Turkish and French materials,[3] [4] and its first issue appeared in September that year. Its founders were Salah Cimcoz and Celal Esat Arseven.[5] Lucien Sciuto, a Salonican Jewish journalist, was the editor[6] of the magazine which employed large number of cartoonists who produced rich cartoon styles.[7] [3] The magazine introduced the concept of modern cartoons in terms of lines and captions used.[8] Because before Kalem cartoon was considered to be just painting by the journalists in the Ottoman Empire.[8]

One of the major contributors was Cemil Cem who started his journalistic career in Kalem[9] which targeted educated Ottomans.[7] Another contributor was Refik Halit Karay.[10] There were also international contributors of Kalem one of whom was Henri Yan, a French journalist.[11] In October 1908 the magazine reported its circulation as 13,000 copies.[3] In the same date Kalem published a caricature of German Emperor Wilhelm II who was featured as a two-faced man deceiving the Ottoman Empire.[12] Due to this caricature the issue of the magazine was confiscated and the owner, Salah Cimcoz, was arrested for a short time upon the request of the German embassy in Istanbul.[12] Kalem folded in June 1911.[3] [10]

In 2019 the University of Texas at Austin organized an exhibition on Kalem magazine and the political cartoons published in the magazine.[13] The print editions of the magazine are archived at the University.[13]

Notes and References

  1. Catalogue record. Qalem. 130 v. Hathi Trust. 20 November 2021.
  2. Efrat E. Aviv. 2013. Cartoons in Turkey – From Abdülhamid to Erdoğan. Middle Eastern Studies. 49. 2. 224. 146388882. 10.1080/00263206.2012.759101.
  3. Palmira Brummett. Palmira Brummett. Dogs, Women, Cholera, and Other Menaces in the Streets: Cartoon Satire in the Ottoman Revolutionary Press, 1908–11. 437. International Journal of Middle East Studies. 10.1017/S0020743800062498. 4. November 1995. 27. 161221142.
  4. M. Halil Sağlam. Türk Basın Tarihinde Kaynaklar Dergisi. Kültür Araştırmaları Dergisi. 13. 2022. tr. 10.46250/kulturder.1100133. 220. free.
  5. Figen Taşkın. Book review. 2004. 6. 162. Yakın Dönem Türkiye Araştırmaları.
  6. Juliette Rosenthal. From Constantinople to Cairo: A Zionist Newspaper Across National Boundaries. Skidmore College. 28. Undergraduate. 2019.
  7. Aslı Tunç. Pushing the Limits of Tolerance: Functions of Political Cartoonists in the Democratization Process: The Case of Turkey. International Communication Gazette. 2002. 53. 10.1177/17480485020640010301. 64. 1. 145098046.
  8. Gamze Bora Yılmaz. To reintroduce the missing sound: Nationalism in Turkish political cartoons. Istanbul Bilgi University. MA. 47. 2011. 10.1.1.1001.9537 .
  9. Web site: Drawing Ire: Illustrated Ottoman Satirical Magazines. 3 May 2020. 25 April 2021. British Library. 20 November 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210425153941/https://blogs.bl.uk/asian-and-african/2020/05/drawing-ire.html.
  10. Syed Tanvir Wasti. Refik Halid Karay and his memoirs of exile. Middle Eastern Studies. 2019. 55. 3. 451,460. 10.1080/00263206.2018.1520102. 149756420.
  11. Gary Leiser. The Dawn of Aviation in the Middle East: The First Flying Machines over Istanbul. Air Power History. Summer 2005. 52. 2. 39. 26274636.
  12. Erol Baykal. The Ottoman Press, 1908-1923. 50. 10.17863/CAM.15925. PhD. University of Cambridge. 2013.
  13. Web site: Dale Correa. Satire After the Young Turk Revolution: Cartoons from Kalem Magazine, 1908. 20 November 2021. University of Texas at Austin Libraries. https://web.archive.org/web/20210828055536/https://exhibits.lib.utexas.edu/spotlight/kalemcartoons. 28 August 2021. 2019.