Madam Ataturk
BiographyAutobiographyCultural

Madam Ataturk

by İpek Çalışlar

Publisher
Saqi Books
Pages
364
Language
English
Published
2013

Overview

<p>"Sumptuous, surprising, and profound."--Orhan Pamuk</p> <p>Mustafa Kemal Atatürk is hailed as one of the most charismatic political leaders of the twentieth century, but little is known today about his one and only wife, Latife Hanim. A multilingual intellectual who read law at the Sorbonne, she was a suffragist who closely followed women's movements around the world.</p> <p>Her marriage set her apart from her contemporaries, raising her to the pinnacle of political power, truly able to work for the betterment of the women of Turkey. But just after two and a half years, Atatürk divorced her and Hanim was forgotten and maligned. Public opinion became dominated by the image of a sharp-tongued, quarrelsome woman who strained Atatürk's nerves.</p> <p>In the first biography to be written on Latife Hanim, Ipek Çalislar reveals an astonishing woman, ahead of her time.</p> <p><b>Ipek Çalislar</b> is a journalist and writer. She has worked for the Turkish daily <i>Cumhuriyet</i> for twelve years, as news editor and later as the Sunday supplement editor. An international bestseller, <i>Madam Atatürk</i> is her first literary work.</p> <p><b>Feyza Howell</b> was born in 1957 in Izmur, Turkey. Her translations include <i>Fiasco</i> by Coskun Büktel, <i>The Book of Madness</i> by Levent Senyürek, and <i>The Concubine</i> by Gül Irepolgu.</p> <br>

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