Contemporary Kurdish Writers in Diaspora Book Launch
Centre for Kurdish Studies
The Centre for Kurdish Studies is pleased to invite you to join us to celebrate the publication of Sleeping in the Courtyard: Contemporary Kurdish Writers in Diaspora (edited by Holly Mason Badra) and to hear from Holly Mason Badra, Farangis Ghaderi and IAIS brilliant students Elizabeth Pinkney, Nureen Mahmoud, and Cerys Prince-Rayner who will share their reflections on the anthology, but also literature, identity, and resistance.
| A Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences seminar | |
|---|---|
| Date | 2 December 2025 |
| Time | 16:00 to 17:30 |
| Place | Online Only |
| Organizer | IAIS |
Event details
Abstract
Join Zoom Meeting
https://Universityofexeter.zoom.us/j/91991137117?pwd=OWruS5j8bCKqZpWLwXr2kfpaurArp6.1
Meeting ID: 919 9113 7117
Password: 455396
Date: 2 December, 4-5.30pm
You can also purchase a copy of Sleeping in the Courtyard online here: https://bookshop.org/p/books/sleeping-in-the-courtyard-contemporary-kurdish-writers-in-diaspora-holly-mason-badra/22372362?ean=9781682262733&next=t
Sleeping in the Courtyard features poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and graphic work by emerging and well-established writers, this collection shines a light on works by a diverse group of contemporary Kurdish women and nonbinary writers living in Kurdistan and in diaspora. Recognizing the complex web of physical and lingual displacement of the Kurdish people and celebrating the diverse tapestry of their stories, this collection presents work originally written in English and work translated from Kurdish dialects as well as from Arabic, Turkish, Persian, and Swedish. Several works here explore the impact of the countless forms of displacement, cultural destruction, and mass genocide that Kurds have endured. Other pieces illuminate Kurdish experiences of desire, friendship, empowerment, familial intricacies, and other topics spanning across universal human conditions. The writers in these pages take risks both in craft and content—and in some cases, just by daring to write and publish. What emerges in Sleeping in the Courtyard is the antithesis of erasure.


