Turkish women writers refers to Turkish women contributors to Turkish literature. The area is parallel to women's writing in English.
During the Ottoman era, there were only a few woman poets and novelists. Professor Nazan BekiroÃÂlu gives the priority to two woman poets; Zeynep Hatun and Mihri Hatun who lived in the 15th century. But probably the best known woman poet was Fitnat Hanñm of the 18th century. The first Ottoman novelists were Zafer Hanñm who was the first author of a novel published in 1877 and Fatma Aliye who is considered by many as the first Turkish female novelist. (Hatun and Hanñm are titles equivalent to "lady"). Fatma Aliye's sister Emine Semiye ÃÂnasya was also a novelist and textbook author.
The number of women poets and novelists increased sharply during the Turkish Republic (after 1923). The first novelists during the Republican era were Azmiye Hami Güven, author of a novel, HemÃÂire Nimet (Nimet, the Nurse), and several published stories, and Halide Edib Adñvar.
The Oxford Guide to Literature in English Translation (2001) notes a boom in women's writing in Turkey, but notes that these writers have failed to attract attention outside Turkey. One of the first major anthologies of Turkish women authors was a collection translated by Nilüfer MizanoÃÂlu Reddy (1988).