Description

Book Synopsis

In Home and Sense of Belonging among Iraqi Kurds in the UK , Ali Zalme explores how Iraqi Kurdish generations in the UK conceptualise home and belonging. Zalme challenges the essentialist and nationalist approach that often dominates discussions of diasporic community research, instead promoting perspectives from individuals’ experiences and their social practices. Home and Sense of Belonging investigates the Iraqi Kurdish community using a bottom-up approach, analyzing the new generation of Kurdish immigrants in the UK as a new culture with complex practices and rituals of their own.

Throughout the book, Ali Zalme focuses on lived experiences from Iraqi Kurdish diasporic communities in the United Kingdom and acknowledges the diversity of both gender and generational distinctions. Using an autoethnographic approach and interviews with Iraqi Kurdish immigrants in the UK, Zalme questions the homogeneity of Kurdishness and examines its particularities in diaspora.



Trade Review

The way diasporic communities in the West see themselves, and the extent to which they feel they belong, have become hot topics in recent days. This innovative, sensitive, and compellingly readable case study of the Kurds of Bristol, England questions some long-held assumptions not only about Kurdish identity but about ethnic identity more generally. The author -an Iraqi Kurd who sees himself as a member of 'a diaspora within a diaspora' - is well placed to provide new insights into the way family dynamics, gender and personal histories inform peoples' sense of themselves.

-- Madge Dresser, University of Bristol

Ali Zalme offers a compelling analysis of Iraqi-Kurdish experiences in the U.K. by emphasizing complexities within diasporic life stories. Emphasizing a qualitative approach that links diverse experiences of Iraqi-Kurdish memories of ‘back home’ to intergenerational constructions of perceptions of 'home' in the U.K., Zalme challenges long-standing patterns of homogenised diasporic communities. He highlights micro-level socio-economic perspectives to more fully contextualize accounts by Iraqi-Kurdish families in the U.K. Zalme shares ethnographic insights that elevate diasporic perspectives, which frequently have been silenced or excluded because of their social status, age, gende,r or ethnic self-definition. This book is a notable contribution to the growing literature on Kurdish diaspora studies.

-- Vera Eccarius-Kelly, Siena College

This book conceptualizes the experiences of the Iraqi Kurdish community in the U.K., focusing on their sense of home and belonging. It is a strongly argued narrative of transnational displacement, shifting identity and self-positioning between different geographical and cultural locations from a generational and gendered perspective. Drawn from an empirical study with a wide range of data, this publication goes beyond the simplistic account of diaspora, home and identity, encompassing different contentious views, theories and concepts, with a careful analysis of these highly complicated political, ethnographic and existential questions. This is an important and timely book, which certainly enriches the limited academic literature on the Kurdish Diaspora.

-- Nazand Begikhani, University of Bristol

Through the testimony of first and second generation Kurds in the U.K., Ali Zalme challenges outsiders' perceptions of refugee communities by exploring the ambiguities and almost mythic qualities of 'home', a particularly painful concept for the literally stateless Kurdish diaspora.

-- Mike Jempson, Director, The MediaWise Trust

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Reflections on Theory and Methodology

Chapter 2: Historical and Political Background of the Kurdish Struggle

Chapter 3: Literature Review: Debating Diaspora

Chapter 4: Imagining and Conceptualising the Idea of ‘Home’ among Iraqi-Kurds Generations in Diaspora

Chapter 5: The Dynamic Identities of Kurdish Women in Diasporas

Chapter 6: Iraqi-Kurdish in the UK: A State of Limbo

Home and Sense of Belonging among Iraqi Kurds in

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    A Hardback by Ali Zalme

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      View other formats and editions of Home and Sense of Belonging among Iraqi Kurds in by Ali Zalme

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 18/11/2020
      ISBN13: 9781793617545, 978-1793617545
      ISBN10: 1793617546

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      In Home and Sense of Belonging among Iraqi Kurds in the UK , Ali Zalme explores how Iraqi Kurdish generations in the UK conceptualise home and belonging. Zalme challenges the essentialist and nationalist approach that often dominates discussions of diasporic community research, instead promoting perspectives from individuals’ experiences and their social practices. Home and Sense of Belonging investigates the Iraqi Kurdish community using a bottom-up approach, analyzing the new generation of Kurdish immigrants in the UK as a new culture with complex practices and rituals of their own.

      Throughout the book, Ali Zalme focuses on lived experiences from Iraqi Kurdish diasporic communities in the United Kingdom and acknowledges the diversity of both gender and generational distinctions. Using an autoethnographic approach and interviews with Iraqi Kurdish immigrants in the UK, Zalme questions the homogeneity of Kurdishness and examines its particularities in diaspora.



      Trade Review

      The way diasporic communities in the West see themselves, and the extent to which they feel they belong, have become hot topics in recent days. This innovative, sensitive, and compellingly readable case study of the Kurds of Bristol, England questions some long-held assumptions not only about Kurdish identity but about ethnic identity more generally. The author -an Iraqi Kurd who sees himself as a member of 'a diaspora within a diaspora' - is well placed to provide new insights into the way family dynamics, gender and personal histories inform peoples' sense of themselves.

      -- Madge Dresser, University of Bristol

      Ali Zalme offers a compelling analysis of Iraqi-Kurdish experiences in the U.K. by emphasizing complexities within diasporic life stories. Emphasizing a qualitative approach that links diverse experiences of Iraqi-Kurdish memories of ‘back home’ to intergenerational constructions of perceptions of 'home' in the U.K., Zalme challenges long-standing patterns of homogenised diasporic communities. He highlights micro-level socio-economic perspectives to more fully contextualize accounts by Iraqi-Kurdish families in the U.K. Zalme shares ethnographic insights that elevate diasporic perspectives, which frequently have been silenced or excluded because of their social status, age, gende,r or ethnic self-definition. This book is a notable contribution to the growing literature on Kurdish diaspora studies.

      -- Vera Eccarius-Kelly, Siena College

      This book conceptualizes the experiences of the Iraqi Kurdish community in the U.K., focusing on their sense of home and belonging. It is a strongly argued narrative of transnational displacement, shifting identity and self-positioning between different geographical and cultural locations from a generational and gendered perspective. Drawn from an empirical study with a wide range of data, this publication goes beyond the simplistic account of diaspora, home and identity, encompassing different contentious views, theories and concepts, with a careful analysis of these highly complicated political, ethnographic and existential questions. This is an important and timely book, which certainly enriches the limited academic literature on the Kurdish Diaspora.

      -- Nazand Begikhani, University of Bristol

      Through the testimony of first and second generation Kurds in the U.K., Ali Zalme challenges outsiders' perceptions of refugee communities by exploring the ambiguities and almost mythic qualities of 'home', a particularly painful concept for the literally stateless Kurdish diaspora.

      -- Mike Jempson, Director, The MediaWise Trust

      Table of Contents

      Chapter 1: Reflections on Theory and Methodology

      Chapter 2: Historical and Political Background of the Kurdish Struggle

      Chapter 3: Literature Review: Debating Diaspora

      Chapter 4: Imagining and Conceptualising the Idea of ‘Home’ among Iraqi-Kurds Generations in Diaspora

      Chapter 5: The Dynamic Identities of Kurdish Women in Diasporas

      Chapter 6: Iraqi-Kurdish in the UK: A State of Limbo

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