EUME
2024/ 2025

Delal Aydın

Belonging, Mourning, Mobilising: The Affective Politics of Kurdish Diasporic Communities in Europe

Delal Aydın’s research combines historical sociology and political anthropology, focusing on community-building within Kurdish political mobilization and the role of intimacy in shaping political subjectivity in response to state violence. She earned her PhD in Sociology from the State University of New York at Binghamton, where her dissertation explored the political significance of friendship in Kurdish youth mobilization. Her current research examines the role of affective ties in Kurdish transnational mobilization and diaspora politics. Delal spent a year as a postdoctoral researcher in the Faculty of Political and Social Sciences and as a research fellow at the Center for Social Movement Studies (COSMOS) at the Scuola Normale Superiore in Italy (2020-21). She then worked as a Philipp Schwartz Research Fellow of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation at the University of Duisburg-Essen (2021-24). Following this, she conducted research at the Institute for European Ethnology (IfEE) at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin with support from the Gerda Henkel Foundation. Delal has published on various moments of Kurdish mobilization, from Newroz celebrations to youth politics, in both English and Turkish. She is revising her book manuscript for publication, titled Friendship in Revolution: Kurdish Youth Mobilization in the Shadow of the State. In 2024-25, she is an affiliated EUME Fellow at the Forum Transregionale Studien and a visiting scholar at the Geneva Graduate Institute in the Anthropology and Sociology Department (ANSO).

Belonging, Mourning, Mobilising: The Affective Politics of Kurdish Diasporic Communities in Europe

The movement of displaced and diasporic populations is reshaping the social, political, and cultural landscapes of our world. These communities, navigating the intersections of state violence, forced migration, and transnational activism, challenge conventional notions of identity, belonging, and political mobilization. While much scholarly attention has focused on the structural and institutional dimensions of displacement, less emphasis has been placed on the emotional and affective dynamics that underpin the lived experiences of these communities. My project explores these affective dimensions within Kurdish diasporic communities, examining how emotions, memory, and cultural practices – specifically hevaltî (friendship), mourning, and Newroz celebrations – sustain political subjectivities and foster solidarity across generations and geographies. Focusing on Kurdish diaspora hubs in Berlin, Brussels, and Geneva, this research investigates how these practices enable Kurdish communities to navigate displacement, state violence, and exclusion, while also imagining alternative futures. The project contributes to transnational mobilization, diaspora studies, and affect theory by addressing how emotions and cultural practices shape collective identities and political engagement. Methodologically, the research integrates ethnographic fieldwork, oral history, and archival research to explore lived experiences of solidarity, resistance, and identity. This study not only advances our understanding of Kurdish political mobilization but also offers insights into the broader processes of diaspora politics and the transformative potential of affective ties in global social movements.