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*“The Kurdish Question”: Challenges to social theory and geographical
thought*



Association of American Geographers Conference, 2018

New Orleans, USA, 10-14 April 2018



*Organizers*



Bengi Akbulut (Concordia University)

Azat Z. Gundogan (Florida State University)

John Kendall (University of Minnesota)

Kaner Atakan Türker (Clark University)


*Outline*



In 1930, Celadet Bedirxan first posed “the Kurdish Question,” a phrase he
used to signify a complex, pluralistic amalgamation of struggles led by the
Kurds, extending back over the course of more than three centuries.
Bedirxan wrote with sincerity and compassion, bearing in his words a
responsibility to the collective suffering and injustice in which he was
living. That same year, Bedirxan helped orchestrate the Ararat rebellion, a
large-scale uprising against the nascent Turkish state.



The history of Bedirxan and the Ararat rebellion help highlight Kurdistan
as, among other things, a distinct and persistent geographical problem. The
rebellion was in no small part a refusal to obey the authority of lines
drawn on maps by foreign powers after World War I. The Kurds who rebelled
stood in the way of the common efforts of the British, French, and Turks to
deny Kurds any form of spatial representation. Moreover, many of the
organizers, including Bedirxan, led the rebellion from exile, a point which
serves as testament to the resilience of geographical imaginations despite
the formation of colonial spaces which seek to dislocate and destroy them. Yet,
while keeping the thought of Kurdistan at home in the collective memory of
the Kurds, the Ararat rebellion, like so many Kurdish uprisings before and
after, fell short of its aspiration for self-determination. The century
since has left Kurdistan scarred and unsettled, an enduring survival of so
many splits and sutures, but also so much novel creativity and agency.
Nevertheless, the Kurdish Question remains unanswered, and violence against
the Kurds continues across the four countries—Iran, Iraq, Syria, and
Turkey—which still dissimulate Kurdistan's boundaries.



But the silence of this violence, the absence of an answer, is becoming
harder and harder to ignore. Several recent events have brought the Kurds
much further to the fore of international attention: Turkey's revamped
oppression of its Kurdish citizenry, the emergence of a *de facto*
autonomous region in Northern Syria amid strife and civil war, the
independence referendum in Iraqi Kurdistan, and the ongoing human rights
violations against the Kurds in Iran. Partly as a result, Kurdistan compels
more academic scholarship now than ever.



Social theory and geographical thought, however, have been slow to respond.
Many analyses of the Kurdish region rely on tired and ill-fitted
theoretical frameworks, and often fail to address the Kurdish Question in
its geographical specificity and its multitudinous dimensions. Within a
context where notions of identity, autonomy, economy, boundary and others
are being re-imagined and re-enacted, we have a responsibility, indeed an
obligation, to attend to Kurdistan as not merely an object of knowledge,
but as a place and process radically imposing itself onto our ontological,
epistemological, and methodological perspectives. Equally, as researchers
critically invested in geographical thought and social theory, we seek to
establish new channels of understanding with the interdisciplinary field of
Kurdish Studies. The inquiry which grounds this call for papers is hence
double-sided:

*1.)* *How does the Kurdish Question challenge and disrupt prevailing
trends in social theory and geographical thought?*

*2.)* *How might geographical thought better collaborate with Kurdish
Studies in order to extend the Kurdish Question into untrammeled terrain
and new, emancipatory futures? *



We are organizing this session as a part of the Annual AAG Meeting (April
10-14, 2018, New Orleans) in order to open space within the discipline for
confronting the contemporary challenges that Kurdistan and the Kurdish
Question pose. We are also aware that interest in geographical thought and
social theory widely exceeds the disciplinary boundaries of geography, and
thus we warmly welcome folks from outside of the discipline to contribute
and help us work through these questions.



Possible topics include but are by no means limited to *rethinking*:

·       Statelessness, territory, and borders in the context of Kurdish
experience

·       Autonomy, self-determination, and sovereignty

·       Place and place-making with respect to Kurdistan

·       feminist theory and queer theory through jineology,

·       Statelessness and its impact on Kurdish dialects

·       Rural-urban transition in the context of Kurdish migration

·       Geographies of Kurdish labor

·       Historical relations of Kurds and Kurdistan to colonial powers

·       Geographical imaginations in art and politics

·       Intersections between peace, conflict, and Kurdish resistance

·       Diaspora and migration in the context of Kurdish experience

·       The Kurdish subject and its challenges to studying citizenship



*Submissions*



Please submit a title and abstract of no more than 250 words to John
Kendall ([log in to unmask]) by Oct. 18th. We will respond to all submissions
by October 22nd.