Syrian Displacement, Gender and Boundary-Making in the Turkish Borderlands

Main Article Content

Şule Can

Abstract

This article presents a reflexive ethnographic analysis of ‘refugee lives’ and borders and boundary-making in the Turkish borderlands. Since 2011, the humanitarian crisis as a result of the Syrian civil war, and the arrival at the European border zones of refugees crossing the Mediterranean, have occupied the news outlets of the world. Today the European Union and Turkey look for permanent ‘solutions’ and emphasize ‘integration’ as a durable response to forced migration. This essay explores reflexive dimensions of long-term-fieldwork with Syrian refugees at the Turkey-Syria border through an analysis of ethnographic encounters and the politics of belonging and place-making. Borders are often contested spaces that complicate the researcher’s positionality, which oscillates between a politically engaged subject position and the ‘stranger’ who encounters the ‘other’ and must negotiate her space. By examining the Turkish-Syrian border and Syrian refugees’ experiences in the border city of Antakya, this article offers a critical lens to view the identity and politics of the researcher and embodied geopolitics.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Article Details

How to Cite
Can, Şule. (2022). Syrian Displacement, Gender and Boundary-Making in the Turkish Borderlands. Anthropology of East Europe Review, 38(1). https://doi.org/10.14434/aeer.v37i1.33502
Section
Articles

References

Bashir, Nadia. 2019. “The Qualitative Researcher. The Flip Side of The Research Encounter with Vulnerable People.” Qualitative Research 20, no. 5: 667-683.

Behar, Ruth. 1996. The Vulnerable Observer. Anthropology That Breaks Your Heart. Boston: Beacon Press.

Berger, Roni. 2013. “Now I See It, Now I Don’t. Researcher’s Position and Reflexivity in Qualitative Research.” Qualitative Research 15, no. 2: 219-234.

Cabot, Heath. 2016. “ ‘Contagious’ Solidarity: Reconfiguring Care and Citizenship in Greece’s Social Clinics.” Social Anthropology 24, no. 2: 152-166.

Can, Şule. 2017. “The Syrian Civil War, Sectarianism and Political Change at the Turkish-Syrian Border.” Social Anthropology 25, no. 2:174-189.

Can, Şule. 2019. Refugee Encounters at the Turkish-Syrian Border. Antakya at the Crossroads. London: Routledge.

Carpi, Estella, and Pınar Şenoğuz. 2019. “Refugee Hospitality in Lebanon and Turkey. On Making the ‘Other’.” International Migration 57, no. 2: 126-142.

Coffey, Amanda. 1999. The Ethnographic Self. Fieldwork and the Representation of Identity. London: Sage Publications.

Dağtaş, Seçil. 2018. “Inhabiting Difference across Religion and Gender. Displaced Women’s Experiences at Turkey’s Border with Syria.” Refuge 34: 50-59.

De Leon, Jason. 2015. The Land of Open Graves Living and Dying on the Migrant Trail. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Donnan, Hastings, and Thomas M. Wilson. 1999. Borders. Frontiers of Identity, Nation and State. Oxford: Berg.

Dursunoğlu, Alptekin, and Isa Eren. 2014. Suriye’de Vekalet Savasi [Proxy War in Syria]. Istanbul: Onsoz Yayincilik.

Ferdoush, Azmeary Md. 2020. “Navigating the ‘Field’. Reflexivity, Uncertainties, and Negotiation along the Border of Bangladesh and India.” Ethnography, no. 0: 1-21.

Geros, Panagiotis. 2008. “Doing Fieldwork within Fear and Silences.” In Taking Sides. Ethics, Politics and Fieldwork in Anthropology, edited by Heidi Armbruster and Anna Laerke, 89-118. New York: Berghahn Books.

Greenhouse, Carol J., Elizabeth Mertz, and Jay B. Warren, eds. 2002. Ethnography in Unstable Places. Everyday Lives in Contexts of Dramatic Political Change. Durham: Duke University Press.

Hage, Ghassan. 2009. “Hating Israel in the Field. On Ethnography and Political Emotions.” Anthropological Theory 9: 59-79.

Hannerz, Ulf. 1998. “Other Transnationals. Perspectives Gained from Studying Sideways.” Paideuma: Mitteilungen zur Kulturkunde 44: 109-123.

Haraway, Donna. 1988. “Situated Knowledges. The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective.” Feminist Studies 14, no. 3: 575-599.

Ilcan, Suzan. 2021. “The Border Harms of Human Displacement. Harsh Landscapes and Human Rights Violations.” Social Sciences 10, no. 123: 1-16.

İçduygu, Ahmet. 2015. Syrian Refugees in Turkey. The Long Road Ahead. Washington, DC: Migration Policy Institute.

Kobayashi, Audrey. 2003. “GPC Ten Years On. Is Self-Reflexivity Enough?” Gender, Place & Culture 10, no. 4: 345-349.

Lutz, Catherine, and Geoffrey White. 1986. “The Anthropology of Emotions.” Annual Review of Anthropology 15: 405-436.

Manos, Ioannis. 2005. “Border Crossings. Dance Performance and Identity Politics in a Border Region in Northern Greece.” In Culture and Power at the Edges of the State. National Support and Subversion in European Border Regions, edited by Hastings Donnan and Thomas. M. Wilson, 127-153. Munster: LIT Verlag.

Mullings, Beverly. 1999. “Insider or Outsider, Both or Neither. Some Dilemmas of Interviewing in a Cross-Cultural Setting.” Geoforum 30, no. 4: 337-350.

Oktav, Ö. Zeynep, and Çelikaksoy, Aycan. 2015. “The Syrian Refugee Challenge and Turkey’s Quest for Normative Power in the Middle East.” International Journal: Canada’s Journal of Global Policy Analysis 70, no. 3: 408-420.

Özden, Şenay, and Oula Ramadan. 2019. Syrian Women’s Perspectives on Life in Turkey. Rights, Relations and Civil Society. Istanbul: Badael Foundation.

Pearlman, Wendy. 2017. We Crossed a Bridge and It Trembled. Voices from Syria. New York: Harper Collins Publishers.

Simpson, Audra. 2014. Mohawk Interruptus. Political Life Across the Borders of Settler States. Durham: Duke University Press.

Zaman, Shahaduz. 2008. “Native Among the Natives. Physician Anthropologist Doing Hospital Ethnography at Home.” Journal of Contemporary Ethnography 37, no. 2: 135-154.