This article was automatically translated from the original Turkish version.
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The Death Row Youth is a novel published as the final work in Emine Şenlikoğlu’s series Memories for the Youth. The plot unfolds within a single night in a prison cell, following a chronological timeline. The novel delicately examines class distinctions, contradictions within social structures, and themes of justice and conscience. The narrative is structured like a dramatic play, with intense focus on conflicts between characters.
The novel takes place over one night in a prison cell housing young men sentenced to death. The story centers on the internal and external tensions experienced by a young detainee in the hours before his execution, as well as the moral questions that arise during this period. Evaluations of the country’s upper and lower classes, critiques of the justice system, and confrontations with fate are brought to the forefront.
Justice and Social Inequality: The novel sheds light on class-based disparities within judicial processes and their impact on individuals.
Human Dignity and Conscience: The way convicts confront fate, execution, and societal judgment creates a psychological portrait in which human values are tested.
Responsibility and Revenge: While emphasizing individual choices against external circumstances, the novel also questions social obligations through dialogues that reveal inner reckonings among characters.
The novel’s style is designed to create a dramatic and intense atmosphere. Dialogues unfold with the fluidity of a theatrical script; explanations and monologues occasionally take on the quality of staged scenes. The narration aligns with a rapidly developing plot while maintaining psychological depth, drawing the reader into the atmosphere of a solitary, monumental monologue.
Protagonist (Young Detainee): A character in the cell whose execution is imminent. He reflects deeply on justice, fate, and societal judgment, weighing his own destiny against the opinions of others.
Other Detainees: Characters with diverse backgrounds who inhabit the cell. Class-based and psychological conflicts emerge through their individual differences.
Cell Officers / Representatives of the Justice System (Indirect): Though not directly present on stage, their influence and the pressure they exert are reflected in the cell’s conditions and interactions with the inmates.
Şenlikoğlu, Emine. İdamlık Genç. Mektup Yayınları. 2011.

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