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The Middle East without Space?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 April 2017
Extract
One of the first ways that many scholars of the Middle East encounter the region is precisely through the lens of “region” itself. Our ability to know the Middle East as a region today, we learn, is a complicated inheritance of imperialism, Orientalism, and Cold War area studies scholarship. To study the Middle East as the “Middle East,” in other words, is to be necessarily positioned within a contested and unequal field of knowledge, one whose contours are both historically and geographically specific. Much of the best research and teaching within Middle East studies continues to demonstrate that knowing about the region—and the world more broadly—is closely entwined with the politics of the region. The interdisciplinary spatial turn within Middle East studies has been and continues to be so fertile precisely because of that reflexivity.
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References
NOTES
1 See Mitchell, Timothy, “The Middle East in the Past and Future of Social Science,” in The Politics of Knowledge: Area Studies and the Disciplines, ed. Szanton, David L. (Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press, 2004), 74–118 Google Scholar.
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12 Ibid., 3. Her theorization of the spatiality of freedom draws on a range of scholars, but this particular formulation specifically cites the work of Saskia Sassen and Edward Soja.
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