“Green peppers, tomatoes, and lemons, disunite!”: Feminist solidarity in times of wars

Serra Hakyemez, Ozlem Yasak

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This article focuses on female bodies co-laboring across the racial lines and academic-activist divides to explore both the potentials and constraints of feminist solidarity in the hyper-masculine and ultra-nationalist normative order of the global war on terror. Anthropological studies have deconstructed phantasmatic narratives of the global war on terror by disclosing its racialized and classed structure. However, what remains understudied is how racialized female bodies are subjected to the biopower and necropower of this war. This ethnography concentrates on the feminist solidarity between Özlem Yasak and Serra Hakyemez, the coauthors of this article, which stretches over 13 years and moves between the colony and the metropole and the Global South and Global North. It examines how a Turkish academic and a Kurdish activist (both lower middle-class women) forge, cultivate, and repair their comradeship as they move from an immigration office to their family house to neoliberal universities. Based on what we call the Other-graphy as a new feminist method, this article argues that the global war on terror expands its reach as the humanitarian and neoliberal regimes of power recruit activists and academics to the fantasy of autonomous subjectivity posited against their possible political solidarity.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)509-520
Number of pages12
JournalAmerican Anthropologist
Volume126
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors. American Anthropologist published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Anthropological Association.

Keywords

  • affect
  • feminist solidarity
  • humanitarianism
  • neoliberal university
  • war on terror

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