Inventing the Middle East

Britain and the Persian Gulf in the Age of Global Imperialism

By Guillemette Crouzet
Categories: Political Science, History, Political Theory
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780228014058, 304 pages, October 2022
Paperback : 9780228014065, 304 pages, October 2022
Ebook (PDF) : 9780228015000, October 2022
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780228015017, October 2022

How the idea of the Middle East emerged amid the contested waters and sands of the nineteenth-century Persian Gulf.

Description

The “Middle East” has long been an indispensable and ubiquitous term in discussing world affairs, yet its history remains curiously underexplored. Few question the origin of the term or the boundaries of the region, commonly understood to have emerged in the twentieth century after World War I.

Guillemette Crouzet offers a new account in Inventing the Middle East. The book traces the idea of the Middle East to a century-long British imperial zenith in the Indian subcontinent and its violent overspill into the Persian Gulf and its hinterlands. Encroachment into the Gulf region began under the expansionist East India Company. It was catalyzed by Napoleon’s invasion of Egypt and heightened by gunboat attacks conducted in the name of pacifying Arab “pirates.” Throughout the 1800s the British secured this crucial geopolitical arena, transforming it into both a crossroads of land and sea and a borderland guarding British India’s western flank. Establishing this informal imperial system involved a triangle of actors in London, the subcontinent, and the Gulf region itself. By the nineteenth century’s end, amid renewed waves of inter-imperial competition, this nexus of British interests and narratives in the Gulf region would occasion the appearance of a new name: the Middle East.

Charting the spatial, political, and cultural emergence of the Middle East, Inventing the Middle East reveals the deep roots of the twentieth century’s geographic upheavals.

Reviews

“Deeply researched and elegantly written, Crouzet’s Inventing the Middle East offers a major intervention in historical analysis of Britain’s conception of the nineteenth-century Persian Gulf. Taking archaeologists, cartographers, colonial bureaucrats, pearl fishers, slave traders, steam technologists, and Wahhabis into her capacious purview, Crouzet expertly anatomizes the emergence of the Gulf.” Margot Finn, University College London

“Working with beaches and water, rather than deserts and oil, Crouzet recasts the origins of the idea of the Middle East. A masterful narration of a complex history of British imperial violence, treaty-making, trade, and indirect rule. This book makes an empirically rich contribution to recent efforts to centre the Gulf in world and British imperial history.” Sujit Sivasundaram, University of Cambridge

“A welcome reassessment that not only shows how Britain’s empire in the Middle East began and ended in the Persian Gulf but reminds us of the violence and contestation of that colonial relationship. Meticulously researched and rigorously argued – an outstanding book.” Eugene Rogan, University of Oxford and author of The Arabs: A History