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Anti-Colonial Theory and Decolonial Praxis
©2016 Textbook -
German Colonialism in Africa
©2023 Edited Collection -
Humanism after Colonialism
©2006 Monographs -
English and German Nationalist and Anti-Semitic Discourse, 1871-1945
©2013 Conference proceedings -
In Search of Moral Authority
The Discourse on Poverty, Poor Relief, and Charity in French Colonial Vietnam©2008 Monographs -
Anti-Americanism in the German Novel 1841-1862
©1978 Others -
«What About the Girls?»
Estrategias narrativas de resistencia en la primera literatura chicana©2012 Monographs -
The Black Scholar Travelogue in Academia
©2024 Textbook -
Indigenous Philosophies and Critical Education
A Reader- Foreword by Akwasi Asabere-Ameyaw©2011 Textbook -
Assessment and selection in the 21st Century
Fairness, equity and competitive advantage©2023 Monographs -
Entre el Sur y el Norte
Decolonizing Education through Critical Readings of Chicana/x/o, Mexican, and Indigenous Music©2022 Textbook -
Kurdish People, History and Politics
ISSN: 2701-3030
Kurdish People, History and Politics is envisioned as a series to create new knowledge about the Kurds. The social basis of Kurdish Studies began to widen in the latter part of the twentieth century, growing in the context of major political and cultural changes on the global and regional levels including the coming to power of the Kurdistan Regional Government in the wake of the 1991 U.S. war against Iraq, the process of peace negotiation between the Turkish State and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) since the 1990s, and in more recent years, the struggle of the Syrian Kurds in Rojava (Northern Syria) for self-determination. In the last three decades, an expanded network of Kurdish Studies scholars have borrowed theoretical and methodological approaches from feminist studies, cultural studies, anti-colonial and anti-racist epistemology. This series pushes the boundaries of existing scholarship through a robust engagement with critiques of nationalism, patriarchy, class, colonialism, and orientalism, with the aim of contributing to the renewal of Kurdish Studies in two distinctive ways: First, it aims to prevail over the limitations imposed on knowledge production and dissemination on the Kurds and their homeland of Kurdistan, in Turkey, Iran, Syria, and Iraq. Second, it strives to broaden the social base of Kurdish Studies, which until the mid-twentieth century was primarily conducted by Western academics specializing in the anthropological study of the Kurdish people, languages and culture. The series encourages authors to engage with theoretical frameworks that allow a radical break with the colonial, orientalist, and nationalist traditions of knowledge production, exploring social media, democratization, border studies, and geographies of resistance in the context of Kurdish diaspora through this critical lens. We welcome proposals for monographs, oral history projects, anthologies, edited collections, and projects interdisciplinary and collaborative in nature.
4 publications
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The Problematics of Writing Back to the Imperial Centre
Joseph Conrad, Chinua Achebe and V. S. Naipaul in Conversation©2021 Monographs