Beyond exception : new interpretations of the Arabian Peninsula

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Beyond exception : new interpretations of the Arabian Peninsula

Ahmed Kanna, Amélie Le Renard, and Neha Vora

Cornell University Press, 2020

  • : hardcover

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [137]-150) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Over the nearly two decades that they have each been conducting fieldwork in the Arabian Peninsula, Ahmed Kanna, Amelie Le Renard, and Neha Vora have regularly encountered exoticizing and exceptionalist discourses about the region and its people, political systems, and prevalent cultural practices. These persistent encounters became the springboard for this book, a reflection on conducting fieldwork within a "field" that is marked by such representations. The three focus on deconstructing the exceptionalist representations that circulate about the Arabian Peninsula. They analyze what exceptionalism does, how it is used by various people, and how it helps shape power relations in the societies they study. They propose ways that this analysis of exceptionalism provides tools for rethinking the concepts that have become commonplace, structuring narratives and analytical frameworks within fieldwork in and on the Arabian Peninsula. They ask: What would not only Middle East studies, but studies of postcolonial societies and global capitalism in other parts of the world look like if the Arabian Peninsula was central rather than peripheral or exceptional to ongoing sociohistorical processes and representational practices? The authors explore how the exceptionalizing discourses that permeate Arabian Peninsula studies spring from colonialist discourses still operative in anthropology and sociology more generally, and suggest that de-exceptionalizing the region within their disciplines can offer opportunities for decolonized knowledge production.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Ethnography from the Exceptional to the Everyday 1. Space, Mobility, and Shifting Identities in the Constitution of the "Field" 2. How Western Residents in Riyadh and Dubai Produce and Challenge Exceptionalism 3. Anthropology and the Educational Encounter: Archival Logics and Gendered "Backlash" in Qatar's Education City 4. Class Struggle and De-exceptionalizing the Gulf Conclusion: Centering the Arabian Peninsula, Decolonizing the Academy

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