The Kurdish Movement in Turkey: Nationalism, Social Movements and Recurring Cycles of Conflict
By (Author) Elsa Tulin Sen
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
18th September 2025
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Hardback
192
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This book examines the Kurdish movement in the context of total social movement theory. First tracing its origins as a conventionally nationalist movement, Elsa Sen draws upon Alan Touraines concept of a total social movement to argue that from 2000 to 2015 the Kurds in Turkey pursued a policy of engaging in a peace process, channeling energy into civil society activism and electoral campaigns, and promoting an inclusive understanding of national identity for all the components of Turkish society not just the Kurds in a hypothetically fully functioning democracy. Both theoretically informed and drawing upon empirical research in the form of interviews with Kurdish and Turkish activists, non-activists and political representatives, the book provides a new perspective on contemporary Kurdish politics as oscillating between nationalist and social movement paradigms, with the recent decline of the latter due to the resumption of military action by the Turkish state and the Kurdistan Workers Party after 2015.
Elsa Tulin Sen is Visiting Lecturer in Middle Eastern Studies at Kings College London, UK, and Teaching Fellow in Geopolitics, Ecole Polytechnique, Paris, France. Her articles have been published in peer reviewed journals such as New Middle Eastern Studies and Maghreb- Machrek, and she is associate editor of the British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies (BRISMES).