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Visiting Speaker CKS- Voices that Matter: Kurdish Women at the Limits of Representation in Contemporary Turkey

Wednesday, February 28, 2024 5:30 PM – 7:00 PM - IAIS LT1 Speaker: Professor Marlene Schäfers Position: Assistant Professor, Department of Cultural Anthropology, Utrecht University Title of lecture: Voices that Matter: Kurdish Women at the Limits of Representation in Contemporary Turkey


Event details

Abstract

 “Raise your voice!” and “Speak up!” are familiar refrains that assume, all too easily, that gaining voice will lead to empowerment, healing, and inclusion for marginalized subjects. Marlene Schäfers’s Voices That Matter reveals where such assumptions fall short, demonstrating that “raising one’s voice” is no straightforward path to emancipation but fraught with anxieties, dilemmas, and contradictions. In its attention to the voice as form, this book examines not only what voices say but also how they do so, focusing on Kurdish contexts where oral genres have a long, rich legacy. Examining the social labor that voices carry out as they sound, speak, and resonate, Schäfers shows that where new vocal practices arise, they produce new selves and practices of social relations. In Turkey, recent decades have seen Kurdish voices gain increasing moral and political value as metaphors of representation and resistance. Women’s voices, in particular, are understood as potent means to withstand patriarchal restrictions and political oppression. By ethnographically tracing the transformations in how Kurdish women relate to and employ their voices as a result of these shifts, Voices that Matter illustrates how contemporary politics foster not only new hopes and desires but also create novel vulnerabilities as they valorize, elicit, and discipline voice in the name of empowerment and liberation.

Biography: Marlene Schäfers is assistant professor at the Department of Cultural Anthropology at Utrecht University in the Netherlands. Her research focuses on the impact of state violence on intimate and gendered lives and the politics of voice and memory. She specializes in the anthropology of the Kurdish regions and modern Turkey. Her first monograph, Voices that Matter: Kurdish Women at the Limits of Representation in Contemporary Turkey (University of Chicago Press, 2022), investigates Kurdish women’s struggle for voice in contemporary Turkey, advancing a fine-grained analysis of how and with what consequences liberal politics incite minoritarian subjects to raise their voices. She has also published a Kurdish and Turkish-language biography of Dengbêj Gazîn, entitled Ez Gazîn Im: Jineke Dengbêj (co-authored with Ergun Sibel Yücel, Aram Publishers, 2021). Shas been the managing editor of the Kurdish Studies Journal since 2022.

Location:

IAIS Building/LT1