Kim (magazine) explained

Editor:Duygu Asena
Editor Title:Editor-in-chief
Category:Women's magazine
Publisher:AD Publishing
Founded:1992
Finaldate:1999
Country:Turkey
Based:Istanbul
Language:Turkish

Kim (Turkish: Who?) was a Turkish language women's magazine existed between 1992 and 1999 in Istanbul, Turkey. The magazine held feminist ideas and values and was among the most popular and best-selling magazines in Turkey during the 1990s.

History and profile

Kim was established in 1992 with the motto "personal is political".[1] [2] The founding company was the AD Publishing.[3] Duygu Asena was named editor-in-chief of Kim in 1993.[4] [5] It featured articles on the equality of women, discrimination against women and social gender[3] which were mostly written by Duygu Asena.[6] The readers of the magazine were middle-class women aged 20-30.[3]

Duygu Asena, in an interview, reported that Kim was very similar to Kadınca and its continuation.[4] Because both dealt with women-related topics such as relationships, sex, beauty, and fashion and adopted a liberal feminist ideology which was used as a vehicle in their struggle against traditional religious laws and customs.[7] However, Asena also stated that Kim was more political and addressed younger women unlike Kadınca.[4] Süheyla Kırca also provides some differences between these two magazines indicating that Kim did not focus on sport, environmental issues and employment which were among the frequent topics in Kadınca.[8] Kim folded in 1999.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Yeşim Arata. Rethinking The Political: A Feminist Journal In Turkey, Pazartesi. Women's Studies International Forum. August 2004. 27. 3. 281–292. 10.1016/j.wsif.2004.06.007.
  2. News: Emrah Güler. Women's magazines that redefined feminism in Turkey. 23 August 2020. Hürriyet Daily News. 20 January 2014.
  3. Duygu Vefikuluçay Yılmaz. Selda Malkoç Kılıç. Cumhuriyet Dönemi Kadın Dergileri (1923-1992). OPUS. March 2019. 10. 17. tr. 10.26466/opus.518421. 192613365. free.
  4. Web site: Fahriye Dinçer. Ülker Uncu. "Ayşe'ler Uyanın, Ali'leri Eğitin": Duygu Asena ile Yayıncılık Üzerine Söyleşi. Feminist Yaklaşımlar. 23 August 2020. tr. 1 October 2006.
  5. Web site: Doodle for Late Feminist Writer Duygu Asena. Bianet. 23 August 2020. 19 April 2019.
  6. Book: Yeşim Arat. Şevket Pamuk. Turkey between Democracy and Authoritarianism. 2019. 235. Cambridge. Cambridge University Press. 978-0-521-19116-6. Şevket Pamuk.
  7. 12. Nadia Siddiqui. Women's magazines in Asian and Middle Eastern countries. 10.1080/14746689.2014.879423. South Asian Popular Culture. 2014. 1. 30. 144285082.
  8. Süheyla Kırca. Turkish Women's Magazines: The Popular Meets the Political. Women's Studies International Forum. 2001. 24. 3–4. 457–468. 10.1016/S0277-5395(01)00167-4. 17672019.