“…We must, for example, investigate if earlier generations of Kurds came to the United States pre-1978 through dominant national classifications as "Turks," "Iraqis," "Iranians," and "Syrians" (Bakalian & Bozorgmehr, 2009;Gualtieri, 2009;Maghbouleh, 2017Maghbouleh, , 2013. Even the literature on Middle Eastern America, thanks to the pioneering work of Alexi Naff (1998Naff ( , 1993, is being pushed beyond the Lebanese and Syrian communities with the nuanced work of Neda Maghbouleh (2017Maghbouleh ( , 2013Maghbouleh ( , 2010 Cainkar (2009), Pauline Homsi Vinson (2008), Sunaina Maira (2017), and Umayyah Cable (2013). Similarly, we aim to push the agenda on Kurdish diasporic studies with the aim to disrupt any notions of a canon while hoping to use the work on diasporas as a way to trouble dominant epistemologies and forge new kinds of critique.…”