
New Books in Middle Eastern Studies Eray Çayli, "Earthmoving: Extractivism, War, and Visuality in Northern Kurdistan" (U Texas Press, 2025)
Feb 20, 2026
Eray Çaylı, scholar and author of Earthmoving, draws on fieldwork and artist collaborations in Northern Kurdistan. He explores how extractivism, war, and visuality intertwine. Short scenes include hafriyat trucks, collaborative art spaces like Loading, and visual strategies that challenge displacement and colonial logics.
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Residency Sparked The Book
- Eray Çaylı became embedded in Diyarbakır's arts community by coordinating a 2018 summer school and becoming Loading's researcher-in-residence.
- He lived and worked at Loading, opening the space daily and forming close ties with local artists and architects.
Extractivism Co-opts Sensibilities
- Extractivism persists by mobilizing environmental and humanitarian sensibilities rather than despite them.
- Attend to war theatres and cultural production as key sites that enable extraction.
Statusless Coloniality Changes Visual Politics
- Northern Kurdistan's 'statusless coloniality' complicates assigning a single colonizer and demands collective visual work to contest domination.
- Rapid political shifts make static progressive visual forms unreliable in this context.

