Dengbêjs on borderlands: Borders and the state as seen through the eyes of Kurdish singer-poets Cover Image

Dengbêjs on borderlands: Borders and the state as seen through the eyes of Kurdish singer-poets
Dengbêjs on borderlands: Borders and the state as seen through the eyes of Kurdish singer-poets

Author(s): Hanifi Barış, Wendelmoet Hamelink
Subject(s): Studies of Literature, Other Language Literature, Nationalism Studies, Sociology of Culture, Migration Studies, Ethnic Minorities Studies
Published by: Transnational Press London
Keywords: Verbal art; self-orientalism; modernity; nationalism; politics;

Summary/Abstract: This article investigates how the Kurdish home, borders and the state are depicted in one of the most important Kurdish cultural expressions in Turkey until 1980: the dengbêj art. The recital songs of the dengbêjs form a fascinating source to investigate how Kurds experienced life on the margins of the (nation-)state. We argue that the songs demonstrate that many Kurds perceived the political geography of the state they officially belonged to as foreign and not as a legitimate part of Kurdish socio-political reality. The Kurdish political geography created in the songs exists in small-scale local structures and alliances, and there is mostly no reference to a common Kurdish cause. Borders are presented as foreign interference in the Kurdish landscape. In the conclusion we suggest that Kurdish fragmented political structure should be understood as a deliberate means to avoid being incorporated in a state structure. This speaks against a (self-)Orientalist interpretation of Kurdish history that defines a lack of Kurdish unity as primitive.

  • Issue Year: 2/2014
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 34-60
  • Page Count: 27
  • Language: English