Customized Forms of Kurdishness in Turkey: State Rhetoric, Locality, and Language Use
By (Author) Ceren Sengl
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
15th October 2018
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Politics and government
Literature: history and criticism
956.100491597
Hardback
136
Width 158mm, Height 230mm, Spine 17mm
404g
The discussions on Kurds of Turkey mostly refer to them as if they are one homogeneous group, with different forms of being Kurdish mostly overlooked. Yet, Kurds have been scattered all across Turkey; they differ in terms of the language they speak; they have also been subject to different policies of the Turkish state in different periods. How can we take these factors into account when discussing Kurdishness in Turkey That is, in which ways does a Kurd living in a small city in Southeast Turkey differ from a Kurd living in Istanbul How does being a native Kurdish speaker play a role in forming Kurdishness What about different state rhetoric in different periods By focusing on these three main questions, this book offers a detailed account on the diversity of experiences of Kurdishness. Based on her fieldwork in five different field sites in Turkey, Dr. engl illustrates, through narratives of her respondents, how Kurdishness is exhibited in different, personalised, and customised forms across different contexts in Turkey. Each substantive chapter in the book analyses a different element that plays a role in constructing these different forms of Kurdishness: state rhetoric, localities, and the language use. By arguing that there is not one single way of exhibiting Kurdishness, this book challenges any standard definitions of Kurdishness, and defines it as the daily (re-)negotiation of state rhetoric and everyday practices individuals experience.
Dr. engl proposes an insightful reading of individual forms of transmitting, constructing and experiencing Kurdishness in a highly tense context in the Kurdish and Turkish regions of Turkey. -- Hamit Bozarslan, cole des Hautes tudes en Sciences Sociales
Ceren engl provides an excellent account of how everyday Kurdishness in contemporary Turkey is experienced, expressed and (re)negotiated and the various factors that influence these. This important and much-needed intervention draws our attention to the personalized and customized diverse experiences of Kurdishness across different settings and localities in Turkey. By emphasizing micro (and not macro or essentialist) everyday constructions of Kurdishness, engl convincingly dissects how Kurdish individuals define their identities as they navigate and challenge state rhetoric, everyday acts of prejudice and discrimination, family environment and neighborhood/social status. -- Welat Zeydanlolu, coordinator of the Kurdish Studies Network (KSN) and managing editor of the journal Kurdish Studies
Ceren engl is professor of political science at Istanbul Okan University.