Teach for Arabia
American Universities, Liberalism, and Transnational Qatar
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Stanford University Press
Published:11th Dec '18
Should be back in stock very soon
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£87.00(9781503601598)
This book explores the complexities of American universities in Qatar, focusing on identity, citizenship, and the implications of Western influence. Teach for Arabia offers a critical perspective.
The book Teach for Arabia provides an insightful ethnographic exploration of the dynamics within Education City, Qatar, where prestigious American universities have established branch campuses. This ambitious project reflects the Qatari government's significant investment in fostering a knowledge-based economy over the past two decades. However, the presence of these institutions has sparked a complex dialogue among citizens, with some viewing the universities as symbols of a shift away from traditional values towards Westernization. This tension is particularly palpable among Qatari students, who often experience feelings of stereotyping and segregation within these academic environments.
In Teach for Arabia, Neha Vora delves into the impact of these American branch campuses on identity and citizenship perceptions among both citizens and non-citizens. The book examines how these institutions contribute to the evolving national identity and aspirations for a transnational Qatar. Vora goes beyond the immediate context of the campuses to address broader narratives surrounding liberalism and illiberalism, questioning the dominant myths that have formed around these universities. She argues that both supporters and critics have largely overlooked the historical legacies of American higher education and the ongoing inequalities that shape academic life.
Ultimately, Teach for Arabia serves as a critical examination of the role of Western institutions in a global context. It challenges the prevailing assumptions of liberalism associated with these universities and highlights the potential for creating a more inclusive and decolonized approach to knowledge production and university life in Qatar and beyond.
"Neha Vora has written a compelling, and personal, account of American campuses in Qatar, one that is as thoughtful as it is thought-provoking. Teach for Arabia brings to life the constantly evolving dynamics and debates within these campuses and offers great insight into the global expansion of American higher education institutions." -- Kristian Coates Ulrichsen * Rice University, author of Qatar and the Arab Spring *
"Teach for Arabia is a groundbreaking contribution to understanding the goals and consequences of establishing US branch campuses in the Arab Gulf. Neha Vora interrogates the claim that universities export liberal education, arguing that such assertions rely on the reification of an illiberal other and a romanticization of the US academy. Her rich ethnographic detail makes this a unique and engaging read." -- Fida Adely * Georgetown University *
"Teach for Arabia boldly challenges academic cosmopolitanism within the United States, demonstrating how notions of the liberal universities of the West versus their supposed illiberal counterparts among Arab states are firmly embedded in liberal ideologies. An attentive ethnography of the lived contradictions within Education City, this book shows how critique has no region and authoritarianism has no territory. Neha Vora's book represents a spectacular and hopefully developing direction in critical university studies." -- Roderick Ferguson * University of Illinois, Chicago, author of The Reorder of Things: The University and Its Pedagogies of Minority Difference *
"If the measure of good anthropology is whether or not one's arguments have resonance with the people being written about, then Vora has produced stellar anthropology. Teach for Arabia should be essential reading for anyone interested in education, modernity and development, citizenship and nationalism, the global university, and most of all, discourses of liberalism and how these discourses travel."––Sami Hermez, Political and Legal Anthropology Review
"[Vora] provides an ethnographic account of college life at six branches of respected American universities in Qatar. By drawing on her experiences working as a professor in the Gulf, attending various conferences and lectures, and interacting with countless students, Vora provides valuable insight on how these branches serve as "postcolonial" institutions established by the West." -- Refael Kubersky * Middle East Journal *
"At a time when the Gulf region is undergoing tremendous political transformation, Neha Vora succeeds brilliantly in highlighting an important ongoing pedagogical and cultural transition." -- Morgan C. Packer * Journal of Arabian Studies *
ISBN: 9781503607507
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
232 pages