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A Global Middle East

Mobility, Materiality and Culture in the Modern Age, 1880-1940

Format: Hardback
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC, United Kingdom
Imprint: I.B. Tauris
Published: 3rd Dec 2014
Dimensions: w 142mm h 221mm d 37mm
Weight: 660g
ISBN-10: 1780769423
ISBN-13: 9781780769424
Barcode No: 9781780769424
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Synopsis
The start of the twentieth century ushered in a period of unprecedented change in the Middle East. These transformations, brought about by the emergence of the modern state system and an increasing interaction with a more globalized economy, irrevocably altered the political and social structures of the Middle East, even as the region itself left its mark on the processes of globalization themselves. As a result of these changes, there was an intensification in the movement of people, commodities and ideas across the globe: commercial activity, urban space, intellectual life, leisure culture, immigration patterns and education - nothing was left untouched. It shows how even as the Middle East was responding to increased economic interactions with the rest of the world by restructuring not only local economies, but also cultural, political and social institutions, the region's engagement with these trends altered the nature of globalization itself. This period has been seen as one in which the modern state system and its oftentimes artificial boundaries emerged in the Middle East. But this book highlights how, despite this, it was also one of tremendous interconnection. Approaching the first period of modern globalization by investigating the movement of people, objects and ideas into, around and out of the Middle East, the authors demonstrate how the Middle East in this period was not simply subject or reactive to the West, but rather an active participant in the transnational flows that transformed both the region and the world. A Global Middle East offers an examination of a variety of intellectual and more material exchanges, such as nascent feminist movements and Islamist ideologies as well as the movement of sex workers across the Mediterranean and Jewish migration into Palestine. A Global Middle East emphasises this by examining the multi-directional nature of movement across borders, as well as this movement's intensity, volume and speed. By focusing on the theme of mobility as the defining feature of 'modern globalization' in the Middle East, it provides an essential examination of the formative years of the region.

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'[T]his fine volume show[s] that the early wave of globalization between the 1870s and the 1940s affected the people in the Middle East in profound ways. The basic questions such as where people lived and moved, what they thought, what they liked and consumed and how they communicated were all shaped and reshaped by the forces of globalization during these decades - we learn that it was not only in the realm of politics but also in culture and society that this period was formative of the modern Middle East; and that far from being external or marginal to global processes, the region was centrally involved in them.' Professor Reshat Kasaba, Stanley D. Golub Chair and Director of the Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington 'A Global Middle East offers the first examination of how people, objects and ideas as diverse as bees and Islamic theology, and hailing from various Middle Eastern locales, were caught up in the flux of the first wave of globalization while at once putting it in motion. It - make[s] a compelling case about how the regional is anchored in the global and vice versa, never losing sight of how these scales are themselves moving targets. Focusing on movement rather than state, on becoming rather than being, this important volume gives a sensitive and multi-angled account of the dynamics of what its editors see as "globalization from below".' Dr On Barak, Senior Lecturer, Department of Middle Eastern and African History, Tel Aviv University