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Middle & Near East

Grieving Cosmopolitanism in Middle East Studies

By Will Hanley, McGill University (September 2008)


Section: Middle & Near East

Subjects: History Writing, Nations and Peoples, Imperial, Colonial, and Postcolonial History, Social History, Study of History, History, Urban History.

Places: World, Mediterranean.

Key Topics: identity, social class.

Abstract

Political philosophers and cultural theorists studying twenty-first-century globalization have found cosmopolitanism to be a productive concept. In Middle East scholarship, however, cosmopolitan has been less than effective. This review illustrates three characteristics of cosmopolitanism in Middle East historiography – elitism in formulation and content, grieving nostalgia, and the privileging of formal labels over content – with examples from nineteenth-century cities and globalized metropolises. Scholars must confront the anti-nationalist teleology and secularizing, bourgeois fantasy at the heart of cosmopolitanism as it is currently used if they are to produced more accurate accounts of diversity in Middle East societies past and present.

DOI: 10.1111/j.1478-0542.2008.00545.x

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