'The highly original ethnography and bold ethnography of Isabel Käser sheds new light on the evolution of the Kurdish conflict and allows us to understand the complexity of gender-based emancipatory projects emerging in a Near East under fire.'
Hamit Bozarslan - EHESS, Paris
‘This splendid book takes seriously the Kurdish militant women in all their ever-evolving complexity, grappling with multiple conundrums. Isabel Käser's work shows us that being a grittily engaged feminist ethnographer does not make it necessary - either intellectually or politically - to resolve these tensions. Rather, what she asks of us is to develop our capacities to resist simplistic resolutions and, instead, stay attentive to the gendered dynamics that shape the lives of the women on the insurgent frontlines.’
Cynthia Enloe - Clark University
‘Isabel Käser has created a real masterpiece with this book … It is the first publication of its kind: a detailed, critical analysis in solidarity of the feminism and women's movement within the PKK and the parts of the Kurdish Movement close to it.’
Source: Wiener Jahrbuch für Kurdishe Studien
‘[The book] is highly recommended for those interested in the women’s movement in Kurdistan, but also for those more interested in the way women’s subjectivities are produced and embodied within revolutionary movements.’
Joost Jongerden
Source: International Review of Social History
‘The Kurdish Women’s Freedom Movement is a powerful and illuminating account of the Kurdish women’s decades-long struggle for freedom and equality in Kurdistan. Drawing on her extensive ethnographic research in three different locations - Diyarbakir, an unnamed mountain camp of female guerrillas, and Maxmûr refugee camp - Isabel Käser not only provides a nuanced and in-depth analysis of the Kurdish women’s movement but also sheds light on the experiences, perspectives, struggles, and achievements of Kurdish women against the backdrop of the Kurdish struggle for freedom and independence/autonomy since the late 1970s in the four countries among which historical Kurdistan is divided: Turkey, Syria, Iraq, and Iran.’
Sevil Çakir Kilinçoğlu
Source: Journal of Middle East Women's Studies
‘a valuable contribution to both Kurdish (women’s) studies and the feminist literature on gender and/in war, … this book can play an important role in the international conversations about the Kurdistan Freedom Movement and about women in war … the author has managed to give space to different voices and perspectives, providing a wide audience of readers with diverse and valuable insights into the lives of militarized women fighting for liberation in Kurdistan.’
Beja Protner
Source: Kurdish Studies Journal