From Life Itself: Turkey and Istanbul in the Age of Erdogan
Autor Suzy Hansenen Limba Engleză Paperback – 5 iul 2026
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781806491506
ISBN-10: 1806491508
Pagini: 368
Dimensiuni: 128 x 196 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Ediția:Main
Editura: Profile
Colecția Profile Books
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1806491508
Pagini: 368
Dimensiuni: 128 x 196 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Ediția:Main
Editura: Profile
Colecția Profile Books
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Notă biografică
SUZY HANSEN lived for more than a decade in Istanbul, where she was a contributing writer for The New York Times Magazine. She has written for publications including the New Yorker, Observer, London Review of Books, New York Review of Books and many more. Her first book, Notes on a Foreign Country, was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Nonfiction and the winner of the Overseas Press Club of America's Cornelius Ryan Award. She has taught writing at Princeton University, New York University, and Bard College. She lives in New York.
Recenzii
A dizzying tour de force: the simultaneously cosmic and microscopic record of a transformative decade in Istanbul, Turkey, and the world. Current events and political analyses are deftly interwoven with, and sometimes subverted by, firsthand accounts of life as it is actually lived. By turns gutting and exhilarating, filled with vitality and humanity, Hansen's writing defies cynicism, thwarts easy generalizations, and leaves the reader with a sense of wonder
Struggling to make sense of the sweeping changes that have transformed Turkey in the past decade under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan - a frenzy of construction, war in the Kurdish region, an influx of refugees and, especially, a sharp autocratic turn - Hansen, who has long lived in the country, homes in on residents in a single Istanbul neighbourhood to create a richly textured human history
Continuously elegant and intellectually conscientious, From Life Itself sets a new standard in literary journalism. Its portrait of a crisis-ridden Turkey is gripping in itself. However, Suzy Hansen is able to diagnose a global unravelling by abandoning the assumptions and expectations of Western journalism that posited a clear division between 'us' and 'them,' achievers and stragglers. While ostensibly writing about a 'foreign' society, she bracingly enables us to understand our own
The Sufis tell us of two paths to enlightenment: to look inside oneself and find the universe, or to look out at the universe and find oneself. Here Hansen is doing both: in her intimate examination of one neighbourhood of one city of one country that is not her own, she reveals to us the swirling patterns of our entire world
In From Life Itself, Suzy Hansen does something extraordinary: she plants herself in a single Istanbul neighbourhood for a decade and watches democracy unravel-this is journalism at its most courageous and intimate. The frontline of history is right outside your door-this book shows you how to see it.
No modern history of Turkey, told through the complex lives and perspectives of its inhabitants, could be more compelling than Suzy Hansen's. In it, she traces not only a nation in all of its specificity, but also the essential elements of the rise of autocracy
While profiling colorful local characters who serve as a window into what dramatic global change does to individual lives and perspectives, Hansen cleverly considers whether . . . [Turkey has] already borne witness to a 'dissolution of nations and borders and people and seemingly civilization itself' that the West is now grappling with . . . A captivating consideration of Turkey as a truly 'post-Western' nation charting its own course in a globalized world
Fascinating on its own merits, From Life Itself is also an urgent cautionary tale for American readers . . . Hansen's expansive conversations with shopkeepers, tradespeople, and local officials reveal a city on edge about immigration, corruption, and other familiar issues . . . Hansen methodically chronicles [Erdogan's] consolidation of power, the effect of which is chillingly apparent after massive 2023 earthquakes . . . Hansen's deep-rooted reporting has undeniable gravitas . . . A rich portrait of a community-and a country-in the shadow of an increasingly powerful president
An engrossing, illuminating account of modern Turkey told through the prism of an Istanbul neighbourhood and the lives that animate it. In deeply researched, engaging prose, Hansen interlaces the district's changing fortunes with Turkey's national metamorphosis and the rise of Erdogan. A sweeping, intimate, and authoritative portrait of a crucial state at the crossroads of Europe and the Middle East
Kaleidoscopic. Suzy Hansen makes sense of Erdogan's rule, showing how the autocrat's remaking of Turkey is mirrored in the lives of ordinary citizens, but also how global and regional forces have determined the country's fate. Hansen's affectionate portrayals of the inhabitants of an Istanbul neighborhood make clear that we shouldn't write Turkey and its democratic prospects off
Suzy Hansen's From Life Itself is the most startlingly vivid portrait of the rise of authoritarianism I have read, combining geopolitical, cultural, and economic analysis alongside sharp local reporting. She masterfully tells a complex story with clarity and force, leaving us with questions not only about Turkey, but about the fate of global democracy. A superb and tremendously compelling book
Struggling to make sense of the sweeping changes that have transformed Turkey in the past decade under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan - a frenzy of construction, war in the Kurdish region, an influx of refugees and, especially, a sharp autocratic turn - Hansen, who has long lived in the country, homes in on residents in a single Istanbul neighbourhood to create a richly textured human history
Continuously elegant and intellectually conscientious, From Life Itself sets a new standard in literary journalism. Its portrait of a crisis-ridden Turkey is gripping in itself. However, Suzy Hansen is able to diagnose a global unravelling by abandoning the assumptions and expectations of Western journalism that posited a clear division between 'us' and 'them,' achievers and stragglers. While ostensibly writing about a 'foreign' society, she bracingly enables us to understand our own
The Sufis tell us of two paths to enlightenment: to look inside oneself and find the universe, or to look out at the universe and find oneself. Here Hansen is doing both: in her intimate examination of one neighbourhood of one city of one country that is not her own, she reveals to us the swirling patterns of our entire world
In From Life Itself, Suzy Hansen does something extraordinary: she plants herself in a single Istanbul neighbourhood for a decade and watches democracy unravel-this is journalism at its most courageous and intimate. The frontline of history is right outside your door-this book shows you how to see it.
No modern history of Turkey, told through the complex lives and perspectives of its inhabitants, could be more compelling than Suzy Hansen's. In it, she traces not only a nation in all of its specificity, but also the essential elements of the rise of autocracy
While profiling colorful local characters who serve as a window into what dramatic global change does to individual lives and perspectives, Hansen cleverly considers whether . . . [Turkey has] already borne witness to a 'dissolution of nations and borders and people and seemingly civilization itself' that the West is now grappling with . . . A captivating consideration of Turkey as a truly 'post-Western' nation charting its own course in a globalized world
Fascinating on its own merits, From Life Itself is also an urgent cautionary tale for American readers . . . Hansen's expansive conversations with shopkeepers, tradespeople, and local officials reveal a city on edge about immigration, corruption, and other familiar issues . . . Hansen methodically chronicles [Erdogan's] consolidation of power, the effect of which is chillingly apparent after massive 2023 earthquakes . . . Hansen's deep-rooted reporting has undeniable gravitas . . . A rich portrait of a community-and a country-in the shadow of an increasingly powerful president
An engrossing, illuminating account of modern Turkey told through the prism of an Istanbul neighbourhood and the lives that animate it. In deeply researched, engaging prose, Hansen interlaces the district's changing fortunes with Turkey's national metamorphosis and the rise of Erdogan. A sweeping, intimate, and authoritative portrait of a crucial state at the crossroads of Europe and the Middle East
Kaleidoscopic. Suzy Hansen makes sense of Erdogan's rule, showing how the autocrat's remaking of Turkey is mirrored in the lives of ordinary citizens, but also how global and regional forces have determined the country's fate. Hansen's affectionate portrayals of the inhabitants of an Istanbul neighborhood make clear that we shouldn't write Turkey and its democratic prospects off
Suzy Hansen's From Life Itself is the most startlingly vivid portrait of the rise of authoritarianism I have read, combining geopolitical, cultural, and economic analysis alongside sharp local reporting. She masterfully tells a complex story with clarity and force, leaving us with questions not only about Turkey, but about the fate of global democracy. A superb and tremendously compelling book