As Strong as the Mountains: A Kurdish Cultural Journey"Robert Brenneman provides an awareness of the Kurds' roots in the Middle East as well as their massive urban migration and the resulting cultural upheaval. Based on long-term research, this ethnography takes readers on a journey from the mountains of Ararat, the alleged resting place of Noah's Ark, to urban environments in a megalopolis like Istanbul, Turkey. Brenneman, who lived among the Kurds in both Iraq and Turkey, conducted fieldwork in such places as refugee camps, destroyed mountain villages, and tea gardens in Istanbul. He examines core and changing aspects of Kurdish culture, including human rights, ethnic identity, women's roles, family and community, religious practices, and the transition from oral tradition to literacy." "In addition to providing insight into the worldview of the Kurdish people from antiquities to current events, the author points to key lessons that can be drawn from the ongoing dilemmas they face."--BOOK JACKET. |
From inside the book
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Page 74
... polygyny ( having multiple wives ) is seldom prac- ticed . Those who do practice it say it is often for economic reasons . More wives mean more children , which mean more potential laborers . A contribut- ing factor to polygyny is when ...
... polygyny ( having multiple wives ) is seldom prac- ticed . Those who do practice it say it is often for economic reasons . More wives mean more children , which mean more potential laborers . A contribut- ing factor to polygyny is when ...
Page 75
... polygyny can be practiced more openly . An Iraqi Kurdish friend was quite open about having two wives . In fact , when I saw him again after eight years , he told me he took a third wife when his financial situation improved enough to ...
... polygyny can be practiced more openly . An Iraqi Kurdish friend was quite open about having two wives . In fact , when I saw him again after eight years , he told me he took a third wife when his financial situation improved enough to ...
Page 99
... polygyny , conduct honor killings , judge a woman by the number of children she can produce , and have a higher rate of suicide among women than Turks . Signs of Moral Laxity A leading Turkish newspaper reported a survey conducted among ...
... polygyny , conduct honor killings , judge a woman by the number of children she can produce , and have a higher rate of suicide among women than Turks . Signs of Moral Laxity A leading Turkish newspaper reported a survey conducted among ...
Contents
Discovering the Kurds | 5 |
History and Ethnic Identity | 17 |
Language and Ethnic Identity | 41 |
Copyright | |
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As Strong as the Mountains: A Kurdish Cultural Journey Robert Lee Brenneman No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
abbiya agah Alevi Anatolia Anfal Arabic Armenian assimilated Atatürk Bağcılar bride cites daughter dawet diaspora discuss ethnic groups ethnic identity ethnographic father fight forces friends girl guests Hezbollah hijab homeland honor killing indigenous interviews Iran Iraq Iraqi Kurdish Iraqi Kurdistan Iraqi Kurds Islam Istanbul Izady Jwaideh kinship Kurdayati Kurdish culture Kurdish ethnic Kurdish families Kurdish history Kurdish language Kurdish regions Kurdish women Kurds in Turkey Kurmanji leader living major male marriage marry Medes Middle East Middle Eastern migrated modern mountains muhtar Muslim Mustafa Barzani nation-states nationalist Northern Iraq Öcalon oppression oral tradition Ottoman Empire percent peshmerga political polygyny predominately Kurdish prostitution proverb Qur'an refugees religious role Saddam sense sexual shame Shaykh social society speak Kurdish stories Syria tion tribal tribes Turkey's Turkish government Turkish Kurds Turks United urban values village Western woman Yezidi