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Articles

White Women Filming Kurdish Women: The Instrumentalisation of the Kurdish Armed Struggle

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Pages 229-247 | Received 12 Oct 2022, Accepted 30 May 2023, Published online: 18 Jun 2023
 

ABSTRACT

This paper looks at the gendered representations of female soldiers in war films and reflects on how the role of women in war is imagined. In particular, it questions the media and popular cultural attention that the female Kurdish fighters received, and thereby contributes to the research on women engaged in political violence and their popular representation. A visual, narrative and contextual analysis of two French films (Girls of the Sun (2018), Sisters in Arms (2019)) exposes how female Kurdish combatants are depicted and for what purpose. I argue that the films contribute to the instrumentalisation of the Kurdish Freedom Movement to promote an essentialist understanding of gender and to enact civilisational superiority. I derive several implications from this analysis. First, that it fosters Islamophobic policies at home. Second, that it undermines the revolutionary political project.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Notes

1 When I speak of women/female, my understanding is not biological, but includes any person who recognises themselves in the political category of woman.

2 See for example the critiques to the Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) agenda articulated by De Almagro (Martin de Almagro Citation2018).

3 I place the term in brackets to point out to the constructed and imagined understanding of the “West” dialectically opposed to the “Orient”, as laid out by Said (Said Citation1979).

4 For an overview of the prolific Kurdish Cinema up to 2017, see (Şimşek Citation2019).

5 At least, the fact that the producers can finance the films proves that these films are expected to find an audience and to sell well.

6 The clash-of-civilisation is a term used by Samuel Huntington and since then, taken up and amplified by a number of conservative political actors, intellectuals and media.

7 On the Kurdish question, see Gunes and Zeydanlıoğlu Citation2014; on the PKK, see Joost and Akkaya Citation2013; on the female presence in the PKK and within the Kurdish (armed) struggle, see (Mojab Citation2001; Çağlayan Citation2012; Novellis Citation2018; Göksel Citation2019; Al-Ali and Käser Citation2020; Çağlayan Citation2020; Käser Citation2021); on the representation of Kurds and Kurdishness in films, media and popculture, see Smets and Sengul Citation2016; Smets Citation2016; Toivanen and Baser Citation2016; Rehbein et al. Citation2021.

8 Fot a detailed account of those principles: ecological, feminist, autonomous, confederal, self-organised, grassroot, anti-state and inspired by Bookchins libertarian-municipalism see (Gerber and Brincat Citation2021; Dirik Citation2018; Citation2022b).

9 However, authors have stressed the persistence of patriarchal structure, among other in the Iraqi-Kurdish society (Al-Ali and Pratt Citation2011).

10 As explained earlier, the film remains vague about the groups themselves, so we are left in doubt whether these are Peshmerga, YPG/YPJ or PKK/YJA-STAR.

11 Eric Zemmour, candidate to the 2022 French presidential election, claims that the Judeo-Christian civilisation is in decline and being replaced by Arabs and Islamists.

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