#Amir Hassanpour# , Jaffer Sheyholislami
and Tove Skutnabb-Kangas
Finally Kurdish has made it to the pages of the International Journal of the Sociology of Language. 1 This is an event in the history of Kurdish language studies. There is no article about the language in thirty-six years of publishing since 1974. 2 And IJSL is not alone in its omission of Kurdish. In fact, this is the first time in the West that a whole issue of a linguistics journal is devoted to its study. If we move from journals to books, the picture does not change. Kurdish is visibly missing in the growing literature on the sociology of language and sociolinguistics even though in recent years research on the politics of the language (eg, Hassanpour 2000; Olson 2009), its..[1]
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