Fr. 36.50

Fluid Modernity - The Politics of Water in the Middle East

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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This book offers an innovative, encompassing, historical grasp of the politics of water in the Middle East in the context of modern capitalism and world politics. It examines how water, through its modern capitalist production, is transformed into a water apparatus that binds people to power.

List of contents

List of maps
Series editor’s statement by Saurabh Dube
Preface
Glossary of concepts
Introduction
1 On fluid modernity
1.1 A fluid mechanism
1.2 Fluid modernity and capitalism
1.3 The Middle East hydropolitics debate
1.4 Conclusions
2 Making fluid modernity in the Middle East
2.1 Water and the colonisation of Palestine
2.2 The Tigris- Euphrates and European hegemony
2.3 Cold War, the Nile and the Jordan River
2.4 Cold War, the Asi and the Euphrates
2.5 Aswan and the war of 1956
2.6 Conclusions
3 Fluid modernity in coercive mode
3.1 The Middle East political context
3.2 Flexing the muscle over the Jordan River
3.3 The Jordan- Yarmuk water apparatus
3.4 Frictions along the Tigris- Euphrates: 1960–1976
3.5 GAP in the governmental reason 58
3.6 In the absence of governmentality: the 1980s
3.7 Conclusions
4 Fluid modernity in conditional mode
4.1 The context from 1991 onwards
4.2 Water and Arab- Israeli negotiations
4.3 A Tigris- Euphrates water apparatus
4.4 Conclusions
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index

About the author

Gilberto Conde is Professor at the Center for Asia and Africa Studies of El Colegio de México, where he teaches Geography and History of the Middle East and North Africa, and works on Arab, Turkish and Kurdish politics and society with a special interest on authoritarianism, rebellion, geopolitics, capitalism and water. Before joining El Colegio de México in 2011, he taught world history and critical geopolitics in Tijuana at Universidad Autónoma de Baja California, and carried out research on water and society at El Colegio de la Frontera Norte. Having lived in Syria, Tunisia and Turkey for several years and travelled extensively in the Middle East and North Africa, Gilberto is keen to bring a Latin American, non-West, decolonial approach to his work. He edited Estudios de Asia y África, the oldest Latin American journal on the non-Latin American Global South, from 2012 through 2016. He has published several authored or edited volumes on the Middle East as well as numerous journal articles and book chapters.

Summary

This book offers an innovative, encompassing, historical grasp of the politics of water in the Middle East in the context of modern capitalism and world politics. It examines how water, through its modern capitalist production, is transformed into a water apparatus that binds people to power.

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