Abstract
This article uncovers
women’s rights, education, and the appearance of women in the field of
literature during the Tanzimat and Second Constitutional Period of Ottoman
Empire in Turkiye and the contribution of several writers and women poets.
Working with correspondence, institutional and Social Science Index, and Google
scholar publications, I show how women were provided with educational
opportunities, and what legal and social regulations were done for women to be
seen in the field of literature during the Tanzimat and Second Constitutional
periods. I argue the activities of Poets and writers like Namik Kemal, and
Semsettin Sami and Women poets Makbule Lem’an Hanim, Yasar Nezihe Bukulmez,
Nigar Hanim, Ihsan Raif Hanim, and Sukufe Nihal for women to be seen in the
field of literature. This article concludes that during the Tanzimat and Second
Constitutional periods, women’s liberation was experienced in all aspects of
life. Women poets pioneered the beginning of women’s poetry.