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Emerging Scholarship on the Middle East and Central Asia
Moving from the Periphery
Emerging Scholarship on the Middle East and Central Asia
Moving from the Periphery
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Description
Emerging Scholarship on the Middle East and Central Asia: Moving from the Periphery provides fresh analysis and cutting-edge critique of phenomena and events across the region. Working out of diverse disciplinary traditions, the authors call on varied theoretical frameworks in order to challenge entrenched stereotypes and long-standing perspectives. This volume explores emerging directions in scholarship across a range of issues, including: the Gulf; Saudi strategizing; Afghan refugees in the Islamic Republic of Iran; contemporary Turkish politics; the current Syrian conflict; Middle Eastern and Central Asian art; perceptions of security threats from Afghanistan; and the potential future role of China in the region. The authors in this volume have given wide-berth to dominant approaches to scholarship on the region, while grappling with overlooked issues and marginal populations in order to advance new frameworks. On the Periphery deserves a central place in future scholarly engagement with the Middle East and Central Asia.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Alternative Frameworks: Accounting for the Overlooked, Katlyn Quenzer and Maria Syed
Chapter One: Emerging Trends and Debates in Gulf Studies, Matthew Gray
Chapter Two: Impending Decline? A Reassessment of Saudi Power, Maria Syed
Chapter Three: Iranian Nationalism from its (Afghan) Margins, Elisabeth Yarbakhsh
Chapter Four: Between (Ethno-)Nationalism and Political Islam: The Kurdish Movement as a “Third Way” in Turkey, William Gourlay
Chapter Five: State Formation and Social Conflict in Syria: Causalities, Unintended Consequences, and Analytical Trajectories, Harout Akdedian
Chapter Six: Seen from a Distance: Political Contexts for Middle Eastern Contemporary Art, Sam Bowker
Chapter Seven: The Afghan Threat to the Security of the Central Asian Nations: Myth or Reality?, Azam Isabaev
Chapter Eight: When East Looks West to the Middle East, Ian Nelson
About the authors
Index
Product details
Published | Sep 15 2018 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 224 |
ISBN | 9798216270713 |
Imprint | Lexington Books |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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The thought-provoking essays brought together in this volume address many of the most complex issues facing the contemporary Middle East and Central Asia. The meticulously researched and clearly presented papers within this volume not only provide rich empirical insights into these challenges, but also raise intriguing questions about the prospects of peace, stability, and prosperity across the region.
Benjamin Isakhan, associate professor, Deakin University
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Asking why we often fail to capture the uncertainties of political and social trends, this volume creatively interrogates conventional scholarly approaches. Based on a skillful reading of events from Syria to Afghanistan, it persuasively brings home that to understate the formative influence of local context, agency, and resistance is to miss unraveling the subtleties of Middle Eastern and Central Asian politics.
James Piscatori, Australian National University, coauthor of Muslim Politics