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mardin

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Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2022) 18 (3): 423.
Published: 01 November 2022
... and, while singing, tell their stories on their looms, thread after thread, with their fingertips. . . . Mardin, a city in southeastern Turkey, stands on part of the Kurdish lands, which were divided like a pie in four, a hundred years ago, between Iraq, Iran, Syria, and Turkey. I was born...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2023) 19 (3): 357–378.
Published: 01 November 2023
... with male participants and five interviews with female participants. Overall, we conducted forty-one in-depth interviews, half of them with women participants (mainly under thirty years old), in the cities of Diyarbakır (Amed), Mardin, Bingöl, Muş, and Batman. The selection of research sites aimed to depict...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2022) 18 (3): 419–422.
Published: 01 November 2022
..., and story. In this first issue we feature a cover-art concept essay about Zehra Doğan’s artwork Mêrdin ( Mardin ), in which the artist expresses the intertwining of women’s transmission of collective memories with the practice of weaving carpets in Kurdistan. “Third Space” has from the start aimed...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2006) 2 (1): 1–32.
Published: 01 March 2006
..., and that cluster of rights embodying bourgeois culture that created the conditions for Oriental Despotism in which the individual was permanently exposed to the arbitrary rule of the despot (see Turner 1978, 1984; Springborg 1992; Singerman 1997; Hourani 1970; Mardin 1995; and Lapidus 1967...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2005) 1 (2): 25–54.
Published: 01 July 2005
... read Marie Seurat’s autobiography, where she talks about her Turkish grandfather from Mardin?” Again, not much of a reaction. Had I inadvertently been indiscreet? Of course it could be that she did not read French. I summarized the relevant passage about how a present violence had brought...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2017) 13 (3): 354–375.
Published: 01 November 2017
... of peace. And, since 2001, I have witnessed the Kurdish women’s movement for peace in Kurdish cities, such as Mardin, Diyarbakır, and Urfa. Those of us living in Istanbul had to learn a lot from women living in the East of the country. Peace means listening to the other person. Here we see a crucial...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2017) 13 (1): 47–68.
Published: 01 March 2017
... are invited to participate in the ceremony, which takes place in the barracks. 3. These cities are Ağrı, Antep, Batman, Bingöl, Diyarbakır, Elazığ, Erzincan, Hakkari, Kars, Mardin, Siirt, Şırnak, and Tunceli. 2. Soldiers who die in the battlefield or the conflict zone are called martyrs ( şehit...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2016) 12 (3): 382–410.
Published: 01 November 2016
... mostly leftist or Kurdish people in prisons, police stations, and torture centers during the 1980s and 1990s. The Human Rights Association (İHD) announced later that 713 people were disappeared mostly in Kurdish cities between 1980 and 2000, including Diyarbakır (235 people), Mardin (109 people), Şırnak...
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