October 22, 2020

Book | The Turkish Cinema in the Early Republican Years by Rifat N. Bali

Mavi Boncuk |

The Turkish Cinema in the Early Republican Years : US Diplomatic Documents on Turkey II

Analecta Isisiana: Ottoman and Turkish Studies English

By Rifat N. Bali

This work is a compilation of various documents covering the state of the Turkish movie industry in the 1930s. The lengthiest report found here is one prepared in 1933 by Eugene Hinkle titled "The Motion Picture in Modern Turkey". It is a study of the movie theaters, their clientele and the popularity of the imported movies in Turkey.i Documents on two movies 

1. Document concerning Fox Films inc. Filming atatürk 

2. Document concerning the turkish movie "The Awakening of a Nation" 

ii - Eugene M. Hinkle[1], "the motion picture in modern turkey", july 1, 1933 

iii - Department of State's appraisal of Eugene M. Hinkle's report 

iv - Document concerning motion pictures in izmir

Publication 2007 / İstanbul

2007 200 p.



ISBN13 978-975-428-336-5

REPRINT

Publisher Gorgias Press

Edition Statement Reprint

ISBN10 1617191388

ISBN13 9781617191381


[1] " EDITED NOTES This book, the second in a series of publications concerning documents retrieved from the National Archives and Records Administration premises at College Park, Maryland, concerns a report prepared by Eugene M. Hinkle, Third Secretary of the American Embassy in Ankara. According to Wallace Murray, Chief of the State Department's Division of Near Eastern Affairs, this and other similar reports such as the one concerning the conditions concerning the rise and functioning of Turkish cinema was the result of the efforts of G. Howland Shaw's Chargé d'Affaires ad interim, "to occupy the time of the Embassy staff at Istanbul and Ankara when the regular work of those Missions run low." Although Wallace Murray appreciated the quality of the research and commended Hinkle for that, yet he was not fully sure whether the time devoted to preparing reports actually produced anything of use to the State Department.  

Nevertheless, while the present report, which covers a very narrow section of the life of Turkish society in the early 1930s might not have been of a great use to the State Department at the time, it is today of great interest to scholars and researchers of the Turkish Republic, about whose internal history in the first decades of its existence there remain large lacunae. As evidence of this lack of field research, it should be pointed out that, in the 76  years since Hinkle first submitted his report there has been no study or research whatsoever that would compare with it. Both the present gaps in our knowledge and the vivid and detailed descriptions that the report contains about the young republic and its attempts to use sport and physical education as a medium for the process of modernization and westernization make this material of inestimable value to the social scientist and quite possibly of interest to the lay reader as well.

The State Department's evaluation of the report is also included in this book." RIFAT N. BALI

U.S. Government Printing Office, 1933 - United States

SEE ALSO: AMERICAN CINEMA AND POPULAR REPRESENTATIONS OF WOMEN INEARLY REPUBLICAN TURKEY A Master's Thesis by MÜZEYYEN KARABAĞ

Women’s Memory: The Problem of Sources

edited by Fatma Türe, Birsen Talay Keşoğlu




EXCERPTS

AMERICAN CINEMA AND POPULAR REPRESENTATIONS OF WOMEN IN EARLY REPUBLICAN TURKEY

A Master's Thesis

by MÜZEYYEN KARABAĞ

THE DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY iHSAN DOĞRAMACI BiLKENT UNIVERSITY

ANKARA September 2013

 

Eugene M. Hinkle, second secretary of the American Embassy in Ankara, in

his report, The Motion Picture in Modern Turkey, gave a detailed analysis of Turkish

adolescents and traced movies influential aspects in 1933 with his interviews. He

detected this interest of the young in the Turkish Republic. The report was not

published because the Turkish people might interpret as "offensive" though the

Motion Pictures wanted to publish it. Eugene M. Hinkle explained "history of the

movie" in Turkey dating back to 1901, and he named the film theatres in Istanbul.

He categorized the movies into their topics and where they were produced. He tried to

analyze the audience. His report showed the interviews of 920 school children (both in

primary and secondary schools), living in Ankara. Questions included if they kept

dreaming of the movie stars in their daily lives, who they loved most, if they were

awakened by the movies, how many times they went to the movies, whether they cried

while watching, whether they wanted to travel, etc. He also interviewed with 20 young

people in Istanbul and 8 of them were female, aged between 15-22. From their replies,

one could understand that some of them imitated the movie stars in their manners, in

their hair, clothing styles, and read the movie magazines. Movie stars occupied a big

space in their lives. He suggested that in Turkey, movies had a striking effect to

"bring the west to the east." Comparing Turkey with other American and European

cities, he found the effects of movies in Turkey wider, much more powerful and

influential on the individual because of the low level of material comfort in relation to

goods and services available in Turkey contradicted with what movies presented. He

commented that this led people in Turkey attribute more meaning to movies and they

had great impact on the individual.20 He suggested that some scenes could be

interpreted by Turks as "erotic" because of the cultural differences, while in Europe

and America those scenes would be interpreted as ordinary.21

….

Hinkle estimated the population of Turkey in

1933 as 13,187,514. He suggested that although towns had cinema houses, their

populations were lower. Therefore he concluded that cinema met with "limited

public." But he also added that it was that public which "compose(d) the important and

progressive element" in Turkey.88


Hinkle classified 27 films shown in Pera, Ġstanbul in 1932 according to their

contents. According to his list, approximately fifty percent of movies depicted "scenes

of passionate love making" whereas over ninety percent of movies had alcohol scenes

in it. He suggested that approximately 80 percent of movies screened characters that

were rich, their depiction of poor ones was less while seventy percent of them showed

luxurious things in movies. Over sixty percent of movies had "suggestive clothing"

scenes whereas over forty percent of movies showed "sexy dancing." Love became the

centre of over seventy percent of movies.96


Eugene M. Hinkle also suggested in 1933 that Turkish adolescents were

interested in collecting pictures of stars. In his report, he mentioned a person's

observation in the shop where it was sold:

 In one shop, I found several girls sitting and waiting their turn to see the album

which contained the movie stars. Each girl purchased a couple. On being left

along with the proprietor, he told me that he had sold enough of these postcards in

the past few years to own an apartment house. He said that even boys and girls as

young as 11 bought them and persons as old as 20. He said they were selling

these cards along the Grande Rue De Pera at the rate of 300 to 350 daily.101

Hinkle emphasized that postcards were sold to 5 piasters approximately, as

they did not cost much, they were sold in large numbers. Those pictures were even

framed by the fans. From the interviews made with 211 girls in Ankara lycees, he

concluded that 58 percent of them had pictures of cinema stars. Hinkle commented

that people established personal bonds with those cards by seeing them like friends.102

 

Hinkle concluded from the interviews that when compared with German, French 

and Turkish stars, American stars were more popular among Turkish youth. 

He named Greta Garbo, Ramon Novarro, Lillian Harvey, Billie Dove as the most 

popular ones.106

 

 Eugene M. Hinkle's report showed a 19 year old girl who wanted to act like

Hollywood stars and imitated them.

My favourite stars are Douglas Fairbanks, Jeannette MacDonald, Maurice

Chevalier, Lillian Harvey, Henri Garat, Jean Murat, Harry Cooper, Harold Lloyd

and Mary Glory. ..I would like to look like Marie Bell and would like to be a

movie star if I were to succeed! I like Lillian Harvey's gestures because she is so

graceful and try to smile like her. I would love to dress like stars unfortunately

cannot afford it. As regards beautification, I use some make-up as the average

girl does now and do physical culture to have a nice supple figure as the stars.113

The same girl told that it was the movies that caused her to desire to be wealthy.

Another young women who was 22 years old told that she copied cinema stars

"unconsciously" in the daily life. In addition to this, she envied cinema stars' blond

hair, and "lashes of some of the blue eyed actresses." She tried to apply their beauty

styles in her physical appearence. She was also attracted to the "American films with

the pretty American girls." 114

Hinkle suggested that in Turkey big film theatres started to have

gramophones which played jazz and music from movies. People who were fascinated

by music had time to listen those pieces during intervals from movies.124

 

 In 1933, in his report, Eugene M. Hinkle mentioned what the Minister of

Public Instruction and the Minister of Public Hygiene thought about the movies effects

on young people:

 There is no doubt that, however, that the government represented by the Minister

of Public Instruction and the Minister of Public Hygiene feels that the movies

have a tremendous influence on the youth of the country, much of which is

detrimental in giving false standards and ideals. The Minister of Public

Instruction in expressing the above sentiments described the effect of the ordinary

movie in Turkey as "pernicious.134

 

 Howland Shaw -who worked for American Embassy and served in Turkey for

12 years in his report, Family Life in Modern Turkey (1933) noticed "the battle of the

old and new" in Turkey during this westernization process. He pointed out movies as

one of the most important causes for the rising conflicts in Turkish families, because

movies created dissatisfaction with the real life on the younger generation:

 No less vivid than the unstable figure of the modern Turkish young man as

presented herein, is the picture of the pretty modern young Turkish girl, who

seems to be a recurrent influence for evil. Where else does she get her ideas of

up-to-date clothes, spending money, dancing partners, and an easy life than from

the widespread gospel of the movies? If the influence of motion pictures is overestimated,

it is only because of the frequent reference there to as an element in the

dissatisfaction of the younger members of the family.140

 

Eugene M. Hinkle, referring to Shaw's work, said that "of these 44 family quarrels, 7

were due to in part or directly to the movies and one due entirely to the movies."

Those conflicts took place in middle class families most. Hinkle listed family conflicts

due to these reasons caused by the cinema in Shaw's report as: "Young wife seen

coming out of a movie house with her lover," "movies a problem for a conservative

father," "movie going and photos of stars hidden from the mother," "jazz music on

phonographs taken from the movies or dance halls almost breaks up a home of father

and son..."141 Old generation were not in favour of changing habits of the young people.

 

Hinkle also pointed out that there was a lack of women stars in

Turkey when compared to male actors. Only Feriha Tevfik, the beauty queen of

Turkey was given as an example by him.158

 

 In Eugene M. Hinkle's report, a 18 year old Turkish girl from Ġstanbul stated in

an interview that she read Holivut regularly, and she never missed buying new issues

of the magazine. She desired to be an actress, but she found that she lacked the

qualifications for being a cinema star. She expressed her desire to have the same

outfits of stars, but as they cost a lot, it was impossible for her to buy them. She

added: "the movies dissatisfy me [sic] a good deal with my present life for I desire a

life of love and passion."181 This girl went to the movies regularly and movies created

a discontent with her real life as Hinkle suggested. Stars functioned as role models in

movies, and the Turkish press in offering in depiction of the lives of stars what they

wore, what they used, how they behaved, made this image more powerful in their

minds. Peyami Sefa's novel Sinema Delisi Kız which was first published in

Cumhuriyet as a story section depicted young women's obsession with cinema stars.

Her strong interest in cinema caused conflicts in her family. In one section, the

protagonist of the novel, in order to learn cinema star's current residence, looked for

that information in Holivut magazine. She thought that she would learn by checking

that information in Holivut. Hinkle also mentioned that movie fan magazines were

important for the young generation- they read them a lot.

 

20 Rıfat N. Bali (presented and annotated by) US Diplomatic Documents On Turkey- II: The Turkish

Cinema in the Early Republican years (Ġstanbul: Isis Press, 2007), 28.

21  Bali, US Diplomatic Documents On Turkey- II, 171.

88 Bali, US Diplomatic Documents On Turkey- II, 26

96 Bali, US Diplomatic Documents On Turkey- II, 76-77.

101Bali, US Diplomatic Documents On Turkey- II, 63

102 Bali, US Diplomatic Documents On Turkey- II, 63.

106 Bali, US Diplomatic Documents On Turkey- II, 132

113 Bali, US Diplomatic Documents On Turkey- II, 147-148.

114 Bali, US Diplomatic Documents On Turkey- II, 159-160

124 Bali, US Diplomatic Documents On Turkey- II, 65-66

134 Bali, US Diplomatic Documents On Turkey- II, 59.

140 Rıfat N. Bali (presented and annotated by) US Diplomatic Documents on Turkey-III: Family Life In

The Turkish Republic of the 1930's, A study by Howland Shaw,(Istanbul: Isis Press, 2007), 11.

141 Bali, US Diplomatic Documents On Turkey- II, 168.

158 Bali, US Diplomatic Documents On Turkey- II, 39.

181 Bali, US Diplomatic Documents On Turkey- II, 158-159.

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