Regimes of Mobility
Borders and State Formation in the Middle East, 1918-1946
Jordi Tejel editor Ramazan Oztan editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Published:17th Jan '22
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The emergence of the modern Middle East is the result of three complementary historical developments: the disintegration of the Ottoman Empire, the institution of British and French control in its stead and the nationalist challenges to this colonial scramble. The introduction of international borders that accompanied this process is commonly portrayed as the drawing of lines in the sand, an artificial partitioning that brought diplomatic closure to an otherwise contested historical space. For the past two decades, insights gained from the burgeoning field of borderlands studies have enabled a new generation of scholars to challenge such popular depictions. For them, the region's borderlands were not sites of peripheral activity, but rather liminal spaces criss-crossed by global flows and circulations central to state- and nation-formation across the Middle East. Regimes of Mobility offers a select number of case studies that highlight the connectedness of the politics of borderlands throughout the interwar Middle East.
ISBN: 9781474487962
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
392 pages