ABSTRACT

This book examines the development of Kurdish political economy and the emergence of collective Kurdish identity within a historical context through three main periods: the late-Ottoman Empire, the initial Republican Turkey era, and then the post-1990s period. It relates historical developments to the dynamics of Kurdish society, including the anthropological realities of the nineteenth century through the moral economy frame, the evolving nature of nationalism in the early twentieth century and the more recent construction of a modern political Kurdishness by means of radical democracy, and an agonistic pluralism shaped by left-wing populism.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|15 pages

Methodology within the Kurdish narrative

chapter 3|22 pages

Kurdish moral economy

Historical perspectives on embeddedness

chapter 5|22 pages

Passive revolution

Constructing institutional politics

chapter 6|23 pages

National identity

Many Kurds in agonistic pluralism

chapter 8|23 pages

A Kurdish model

Embeddedness, radical democracy, and populism