Demir Özlü'de Nostalji
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Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü
Abstract
Nostalgia is conceptualized as a multilayered form of consciousness that reconstructs the individual’s
experience of time, space, and identity, extending beyond a mere longing for the past. In modern and late
modern societies, the acceleration of temporal perception, along with experiences of displacement and
crises of belonging, creates the conditions for nostalgia to acquire renewed significance. Within this
framework, the study aims to examine the relationship between nostalgia and narrative production in
Turkish literature, with a particular focus on how nostalgia functions as a writing strategy in the works of
Demir Özlü. The study is grounded in Svetlana Boym’s theory of nostalgia and focuses on the genres of
memoir, diary, and letter. Within these forms, nostalgia is approached as a mechanism that reconstructs
memory and generates narrative. In Özlü’s texts, the act of writing is directly intertwined with the process
of remembering. Accordingly, writing in these genres corresponds less to the recording of the past than to
its reconstruction. In this context, memory operates as a selective and transformative structure in which
past experiences are not transmitted as they were but are reorganized, interpreted, and often idealized.
Özlü’s literary production, shaped by themes of exile, urban life, and existential inquiry, plays a decisive
role in the formation of nostalgic consciousness. His departure from Turkey and his experiences in various
European cities generate a persistent tension between the desire to return and the impossibility of return.
Cities such as Istanbul, Berlin, Paris, and Stockholm emerge as narrative spaces in which the search for
belonging intensifies. These spaces function not merely as geographical realities but as sites of memory
reconstructed through consciousness. The study demonstrates that nostalgia renders the boundaries between
personal writing and fiction permeable, while also transforming perceptions of time and space and shaping
narrative structure. In Özlü’s texts, nostalgia is thus evaluated as a fundamental writing strategy that
organizes memory, reconstructs time, and makes narrative possible. In this respect, the study seeks to
contribute to the reconsideration of nostalgia in Turkish literature at both theoretical and narrative levels.