I have been to Rasih Nuri İleri’s home a couple of times. He would talk about even the harshest memories in a soft style. His house was like a museum, even though this is used too much as a cliché, but this is the only way to describe his house.
On the 100th anniversary of Turkish cinema, books have been published; symposiums have been held. I have read articles reflecting diverse views in some magazines.
At the Barbaros Square near the Beşiktaş ferry station, a neighborhood in central Istanbul, you should definitely go and see the world photographs exhibited in containers.
Calculating how much the state/government spends on culture is a mentality I cannot understand
I read in total horror the news about the arson attack on Ziya Gökalp’s house-turned-museum and how the books were stolen during the incidents in Diyarbakır.
We do not use typewriters anymore. We have donated them to museums or libraries; or maybe we keep them among our antique goods
It was Wednesday at 00:30 p.m. when the Turkish stand opened at the International Frankfurt Book Fair. The keynote speaker was Hamdi Turşucu, General Manager of Libraries and Publications
I wandered through Istanbul’s Babıâli district again on Saturday. I was assuming that I would see queues there, as it used to be, because it was two days before the schools opened.
The story from Anadolu Agency by Tuğba Özgür about private museums was welcomed by everyone who hopes for the advancement of arts and visual knowledge in Turkey