Spotlight on Kurdish literature

By Words Without Borders:

Image: Bahman Ghobadi, Rhino Season. Dir. Bahman Ghobadi. Mij Film, 2012.

Image: Bahman Ghobadi, Rhino Season. Dir. Bahman Ghobadi. Mij Film, 2012.

This month we present writing by Kurdish authors. Writers from the various regions and dialects of Kurdistan consider questions of nation, language, and identity, providing fresh perspectives on this ancient culture and its contemporary conflicts.

Bakhtiyar Ali describes an assassin’s tipping point. On her deathbed, Yavuz Ekinci’s widow remembers the true love of her youth. Murathan Mungan draws on the Kurdish oral tradition. Alber Sabanoglu surveys recent writing about the history of Kurds in Turkey. Prominent poet Abdulla Pashew blends political and personal longing, then discusses the moral power of poetry with Ziad Rashad. Murat Özyaşar feels a shock of recognition. Kajal Ahmad delineates a politics of the body, Hama Jaza aches for freedom, and Jamal Khambar mourns the victims of honor killings. In our special section of Polish literary reportage, Paweł Smoleński interviews the painter Suleiman Shakir in Iraqi Kurdistan,

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