The Kurds in Erdoğan’s Turkey: Balancing Identity, Resistance and Citizenship

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This book examines the circumstances of the Kurds in 21st century Turkey, under the hegemony of the AKP government. After decades of denial, oppression and conflict, Kurds now assert a more confident presence in Turkey’s politics – but does increasing visibility mean a rejection of Turkey? Recording Kurdish voices from Istanbul and Diyarbakır, Turkey’s most important Kurdish-populated cities, this book generates new understandings of Kurdish identity and political aspirations. Highlighting elements of Kurdish identity including Newroz, the Kurdish language, connections to religion, landscape and cross-border ties, it offers a portrait of Kurdish political life in a Turkey increasingly dominated by its president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. Within the context of Turkey’s troubled trajectory towards democratisation, it documents Kurdish narratives of oppression and resistance, and enquires how Kurds reconcile their distinct ethnic identity and citizenship in modern Turkey.

Author(s): William Gourlay
Series: Edinburgh Studies on Modern Turkey
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Year: 2020

Language: English
Pages: 266
City: Edinburgh

List of Figures
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Eruption in Diyarbakır
1 Identity, ethnicity, politics: from Kemalism to ‘New Turkey’
2 Talking to Kurds about ‘Identity’
3 Demarcating Kurdish culture
4 Th e Kurds and Islam: defying hegemony and the ‘caliphate’
5 Contesting homeland(s): city, soil and landscape
6 Kurdayetî: Pan-Kurdish sentiment and solidarity
7 Oppression, solidarity, resistance
8 Kurds as citizens
Conclusion: reconciling ethnic identity, citizenship and the ‘ideal’ in Erdoğan’s Turkey?
Bibliography
Index