Spatiality and Modern Interiors in Yaşamak Yolu Journal (1929-1950)
Downloads
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.52200/docomomo.73.10Keywords:
tuberculosis, healthcare interiors, modern Turkish interiors, health advice periodicals, Yaşamak YoluAbstract
Yaşamak Yolu [A Way of Living], the journal of the Istanbul Tuberculosis Association, played a pedagogical and propagandistic role in building a healthy nation after the establishment of the Turkish state. The journal is a valuable archive incorporating the spaces of tuberculosis combat during the 20th century, encompassing social, cultural, and political information. It reveals how tuberculosis was a crisis that influenced Turkey’s Modern Movement in architecture and modern interiors. The discourse on the contagious nature of tuberculosis and the healthy way of living in Yaşamak Yolu impacted ideas about modern interior design in different building typologies. After scanning the 1929-1972 Yaşamak Yolu issues from the Izmir National Library’s archives, this study categorized, analyzed, and evaluated the data at the intersection of tuberculosis and modern interiors, focusing on national and international sanatoria, housing, alternative interiors, and everyday items. Despite the journal’s broad coverage of architectural typologies, this study, among others, focused on the 20th-century Turkish sanatoria as conventional interiors. The notion that the sanatorium movement shaped the Modern Movement in architecture served as the foundation for this study. To reveal the journal’s vast breadth from urban to industrial scale, portable structures, everyday objects, and/or tuberculosis paraphernalia covered in the journal were evaluated as alternate treatment interiors, furniture, and objects. The extensive content and contextual information, along with the publication’s span from 1929 to 1972, made the analysis challenging. Therefore, and to overcome the constraints in selecting specific built environment typologies, this study set the framework to include the timeframe from the journal’s inaugural issue to the point at which the journal’s published doctors/authors recognized the effectiveness of Streptomycin. This marked a turning point in the spatiality of tuberculosis and thus limited the scope of this study to the years 1929-1950. Due to its focus on the interiors of tuberculosis combat facilities, this study revealed that the journal proved to be a significant archive for the field of architectural historiography and design.
How to Cite
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Deniz Avci

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Plaudit
References
Anon. (1929). Japonyada hıfzussıhha (sic.) çocuklara nasıl öğretilir? [How to teach hygiene to children in Japan?]. Yaşamak Yolu, 3, 2–3.
Anon. (1930). Güzel bir sürpriz! [A nice surprise!]. Yaşamak Yolu, 20, 2.
Anon. (1935, July 4). Yamanlar kampı yarın herkese açılıyor [Yamanlar camp opens tomorrow for everyone]. Anadolu, 3.
Anon. (1940). Erenköy sanatoryumuna ziyaret [Visit to Erenkoy sanatorium]. Yaşamak Yolu, 90, 15–16.
Anon. (1948a). Hatayda bir verem dispanseri [A tuberculosis dispensary in Hatay]. Yaşamak Yolu, 147, 12.
Anon. (1948b). Vereme tutulmamak için [To avoid tuberculosis]. Yaşamak Yolu, 140, 8–9.
Anon. (1950b). İzmir verem savaşı derneğinin çalışmaları [The work of the Izmir Tuberculosis Association]. Yaşamak Yolu, 162, 5.
Anon. (1950c). Resimlerle tüberküloz-7 [Tuberculosis in pictures-7]. Yaşamak Yolu, 163, 12.
AVCI, D., & Değirmencioğlu, C. (2024). 100. Yılda İstanbul sanatoryumlarına yeniden bakmak: Yapı tipleri ve veremden sonraki yaşamları [Revisiting Istanbul Sanatoriums on the Centennial of the Turkish Republic: Building Types and Their Afterlives Post Tuberculosis]. In İ. Akpınar & Ş. Hoşkara (Eds.), Cumhuriyet’in 100. Yılında Mimarlık. İdealkent.
AVCI, D., Değirmencioğlu, C., & Kepez, O. (2022). Architecture of convalescence: Mapping the sanatorium heritage of Turkey [Modern Architecture Research Award]. Turkish Architects’ Association 1927.
AVCI-HOSANLI, D., & Degirmencioglu, C. (2024). From “prototype” to “model”: Architectural and spatial development of Block A (1924–1945) of Istanbul’s Heybeliada Sanatorium. Frontiers of Architectural Research, 13(1), 1–20. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foar.2023.09.006
A.Z. (1948). Haydarpaşa Verem Paviyonu [Haydarpaşa Tuberculosis Pavilion]. Yaşamak Yolu, 147, 6–7.
B.Â.M. [Burhaneddin Âli Moral]. (1941a). Bir veremlinin hatıraları [Memoirs of a tuberculosis patient]. Yaşamak Yolu, 95, 12–13.
B.Â.M. [Burhaneddin Âli Moral]. (1941b). Bir veremlinin hatıraları [Memoirs of a tuberculosis patient]. Yaşamak Yolu, 97, 8–9.
BERBEROĞLU, A., & Değirmencioğlu, C. (2023). Deconstructing the story of a contagion: Tuberculosis and its representations in early republican Turkey. In M. Morton & A.-M. Akehurst (Eds.), Visual Culture and Pandemic Disease since 1750 Capturing Contagion (pp. 225–245). Routledge. 10.4324/9781003294979-15
CAMPBELL, M. (1999). From cure chair to chaise longue: Medical treatment and the form of the modern recliner. Journal of Design History, 12(4), 327-343. https://doi.org/10.1093/jdh/12.4.327
CAMPBELL, M. (2005). What tuberculosis did for modernism: The influence of a curative environment on modernist design and architecture. Medical History, 49(4), 463-488. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0025727300009169
CARR, J. C. (2023). The social construction of airborne infections. In A. Bliss & D. Kopec (Eds.), Architectural factors for infection and disease control (pp. 30–42). Routledge. 10.4324/9781003214502-3
COLOMINA, B. (2019). X-Ray architecture. Lars Müller Publishers.
DEGIRMENCIOGLU, C. (2022). On Latticed Windows, Disease, and the Materiality of a Bygone Epoch. Journal of Architectural Education, 76(1), 127–132. https://doi.org/10.1080/10464883.2022.2017714.
DEGIRMENCIOGLU, C., & Avci Hosanli, D. (2023). Transient yet settled: The rooms for tuberculosis patients in Turkish sanatoria. Res Mobilis, 12(16), 58–83. https://doi.org/10.17811/rm.13.16.2023.58-83
DEL CURTO, D. (2013). The disenchanted mountain’s heritage. Protection and reuse of sanatoriums in the Alps. In D. Del Curto, R. Dini, & G. Menini (Eds.), Architecture in the Alps. Heritage and design (pp. 139–164). Mimesis Edizioni.
DELMAIRE, L. (2023). Locating the health hazard, surveilling the gecekondu. Centaurus, 65(1), 153–186. https://doi.org/10.1484/J.CNT.5.134134
EVERED, E. Ö., & Evered, K. T. (2020). Dispensary, home, and ‘a women’s army’: Framing tubercular geographies and gender in late Ottoman Turkey. Journal of Historical Geography, 68, 33–43. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhg.2020.02.003
GÖKAY, K. G. (1947). Halk sanatoryumları [Public sanatoria]. Yaşamak Yolu, 134–136, 1–2.
GÖKÇE, T. İ. (1948). Verem bilgisi-3 [Information on tuberculosis-3]. Yaşamak Yolu, 142, 8–9.
GÖKÇE, T. İ. (1950). Streptomaycin. Yaşamak Yolu, 170, 2–3.
ILIKAN RASIMOĞLU, C. G. (2014). A Sanitary Journal for Common People: Yaşamak Yolu. İn İ. İlkılıç, H. Ertin, R. Brömer, & H. Zeeb (Eds.), Health, Culture and the Human Body: Epidemiology, Ethics and History of Medicine, Perspectives from Turkey and Central Europe (pp. 299–311). Betim Center Press.
KAYACIOĞLU, E. (1950). Hayırsever bir vatandaş: Süreyya İlmen [A philanthropist: Süreyya İlmen]. Yaşamak Yolu, 169, 5.
KEMAL CENAP, (1932). Erenköyü sanatorium’unun açılması münasebetiyle [On the occasion of the inauguration of the Erenköyü sanatorium]. Yaşamak Yolu, 41–42, 1–4.
KUDSI, Dr. (1932a). Papworth village settlement for the tuberculose [sic.]. Yaşamak Yolu, 41–42, 9–13.
KUDSI, Dr. (1932b). Verem mücadelesinde çadırdan istifade edelim [Let’s make use of tents in the fight against tuberculosis]. Yaşamak Yolu, 43–48, 25–27.
LE CORBUSIER. (1931). Towards a new architecture (1986th ed.). Dover Publications, Inc.
O. Ş. U., Dr. (1935). Acunun en büyük verem hastahanesi [The largest tuberculosis hospital in the world]. Yaşamak Yolu, 73–75, 10.
ÖKSÜZCÜ, M. (1940). Heybeli Ada Sanatoryomu [Heybeli Ada Sanatorium]. Yaşamak Yolu, 92, 2-5.
ÖKTEM, R. R. (1935a). Hep beraber övünelim… [Let’s all share this glory together]. Yaşamak Yolu, 77, 8–11.
ÖKTEM, R. R. (1935b). Heybeli sanatoryomunda neler gördüm? [My observations on Heybeliada Sanatorium] Yaşamak Yolu, 73–75, 19–21.
OVERY, P. (2007). Light, air & openness: Modern architecture between the wars. Thames & Hudson.
[SABAR], Ihsan Rifat, (1932). Sanatoriumlar [Sanatoria]. Yaşamak Yolu, 37, 10–13.
[SABAR], Ihsan Rifat, (1933). Veremden korunmada şahsi hıfzıssıhha [Personal hygiene for tuberculosis prevention]. Yaşamak Yolu, 53–54, 7–10.
SAĞLAM, T. (1949). Verem savaşında mühim bir nokta: Ev meselesi [An important concern in the fight against tuberculosis: The housing issue]. Yaşamak Yolu, 158, 1–3.
SARAÇOĞLU, K. (Dr. ). (1950). Verem savaşımızda propagandanın rolü [The role of propaganda in our fight against tuberculosis]. Yaşamak Yolu, 161, 5,11.
SONTAG, S. (1978). Illness as Metaphor. Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
UYSAL, N. (1943). Evlerin yapısında sıhhî esaslar [Hygienic principles in housing]. Yaşamak Yolu, 106, 10–11.
YILDIRIM, N., & Gürgan, M. (2012). Türk Göğüs Hastalıkları Tarihi [The History of Turkish Thoracic Diseases] (M. Metintaş, Ed.). Türk Toraks Derneği, Aves Yayıncılık.
YÜCER, F. (1937, January 13). Verem savaşında: Dispanser, sanatoryom, propaganda [Tuberculosis control: Dispensary, sanatorium, propaganda]. Tan, 5.