ABSTRACT

This volume gives a thorough and comprehensive analysis of the Kurdish issue in Turkey from a spatial perspective that takes into account geographical variations in identity formation, exclusion and political mobilisation.

Although analysis of Turkey’s Kurdish issue from a spatial perspective is not new, spatial analyses are still relatively scarce. More often than not, Kurdish studies consist of time-centred work. In this book, the attention is shifted from outcome-oriented analysis of transformation in time towards a spatial analysis. The authors in this book discuss the spatial production of home, identity, work, in short, of being in the world. The contributions are based on the tacit avowal that the Kurdish question, in addition to being a question of group rights, is also one of spatial relations. By asking a different set of questions, this book examines; which spatial strategies have been employed to deal with Kurds? Which spatial strategies are developed by Kurds to deal with state, and with the neo-liberal turn? How are these strategies absorbed and what counter-strategies are developed, both in cities populated by the Kurds in south-eastern Turkey and in other regions?

Emphasizing that identity or place, its particularity or uniqueness, arises from social practices and social relations, this book is essential reading for scholars and researchers working in Kurdish and Turkish Studies, Urban and Rural Studies and Politics more broadly.

chapter 1|21 pages

Introduction

The Kurdish issue in Turkey from a spatial perspective 1

part I|129 pages

Making and remaking the southeast

chapter 4|12 pages

What is hidden beneath the Mor Gabriel Monastery wall?

Consolidating borders between self and other, self and the state

chapter 5|31 pages

An ethnographic account of compulsory public service by doctors in Hakkari

The limits of the AKP assimilation strategy and the production of space

chapter 6|18 pages

Beyond Kurdistan?

The Mesopotamia Social Forum and the appropriation and re-imagination of Mesopotamia by the Kurdish movement

part I|131 pages

Kurdish struggles in urban spaces

chapter 8|26 pages

Space, capitalism and Kurdish migrants in İzmir

An analysis of Kadifekale's transformation

chapter 9|27 pages

Rescaled localities and redefined class relations

Neoliberal experience in south-east Turkey

chapter 10|22 pages

Politics of privacy

Forced migration and the spatial struggle of the Kurdish youth

chapter 11|23 pages

Ethnicity, social tensions and production of space in forced migration neighbourhoods of Mersin

Comparing the case of the Demirtaş neighbourhood with newly established ones

part III|42 pages

Spaces of seasonal migration

chapter 12|20 pages

Embodiment of space and labor

Kurdish migrant workers in Turkish agriculture 1