From the First World War to the Arab Spring: What's Really Going On in the Middle East?
279From the First World War to the Arab Spring: What's Really Going On in the Middle East?
279Paperback(1st ed. 2016)
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Overview
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781137522047 |
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Publisher: | Palgrave Macmillan US |
Publication date: | 11/04/2015 |
Series: | Middle East Today , #14803 |
Edition description: | 1st ed. 2016 |
Pages: | 279 |
Product dimensions: | 6.10(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.20(d) |
About the Author
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Notes on conventions
Introduction Lost in the Labyrinth: What's Really Going on in the Middle East?
PART I: THE TANGLED WEB: WHY THE GREAT POWERS OF EUROPE BECAME INVOLVED IN THE MIDDLE EAST
1. Sarajevo, Sunday, June 28, 1914
2. The British Empire and the Arab World: Ambition, Austerity and A Class Apart
3. The French Empire and the Arab World: From the Crusades to the Civilizing Mission
4. The Russian Empire and the Arab World: Religion, Rome and the New Rome
5. The German Empire and the Arab World: Family Feuds and Eastern Ambitions
6. The Ottoman Empire: How the Arab World Was Won and Lost
PART II: TOO MANY STRAIGHT LINES ON THE MAP: WHERE, WHEN AND WHY IT STARTED TO GO WRONG
7. London, Tuesday, December 21, 1915
8. The Arab World Before the War: The Facts on the Ground
9. The Re-Making of the Middle East: Enter the Nation-State
10. From Sykes-Picot to the Treaty of Sèvres: Betrayals, Backstabbing and Broken Promises
11. The Poisoned Legacy and The War's Unanswered Questions
PART III: ALL OR NOTHING: WHY ALL ROADS LEAD TO JERUSALEM
12. Where to Begin?
13. Jerusalem: The Temple Mount
14. Jerusalem: The Noble Sanctuary
PART IV: KINGS, COLONELS AND COUPS: WHY THERE IS A DEMOCRATIC DEFICIT IN THE ARAB WORLD
15. Cairo, Wednesday, July 23, 1952
16. The Kings, the Colonels and the Political Time Warp: The Return of the Middle Ages
17. I am the State: Power, Politics and the Cult of Personality
18. The Problem of Absolute Power: From Stability to Stagnation
PART V: THE SACRED VERSUS THE SECULAR: WHO SPEAKS FOR ISLAM?
19. Mecca, Tuesday, November 20, 1979
20. 1979: The View from Tehran
21. 1979: Holy War and Unholy Alliances
22. The Arab Spring and the Democratic Alternative
Epilogue Untangling the Web: What Now?
Select Bibliography
Index
What People are Saying About This
“Understanding the Middle East is a subject that occupies us all, but might seem at first to be an impossible task. The intractability of the issues, current and historic, almost defy explanation. M. E. McMillan is an historian and commentator of extraordinary courage in tackling the issues in an effort to help us cut though the propaganda. Her impeccable objectivity helps us through the sometimes deadly maze of Middle East politics. Her book is essential reading for historians, commentators, politicians, academics, in fact anyone touched by events in the region.” (Michael Grade, former chairman of the BBC and member of the House of Lords, UK)
“The significance of this book lies in its contextualization of the Arab Spring uprisings and the legacies of the First World War, as well as in its analysis of how these large-scale ruptures have shaken the modern Middle Eastern state system to its foundation.” (Fawaz A. Gerges, Emirates Chair of Contemporary Middle Eastern Studies, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK, and author of Contentious Politics in the Middle East)
“M.E. McMillan successfully throws light on why the disasters that engulf the Middle East grow worse by the day. She does this in a series of brief, stimulating essays that challenge the reader to think hard about the topics she discusses. She clearly cares deeply about the area's problems, and those reading the book will be enlightened and will finish up sharing her cares. Well worth a close read!” (Alan Jones, Emeritus Professor of Classical Arabic, University of Oxford, UK)
“Sweeping in scope and meticulous in coverage, From the First World War to the Arab Spring: What's Really Going on in the Middle East? is essential reading for anyone seeking an in-depth understanding of the historical evolution of the modern Middle East. Wonderfully written, M.E. McMillan captures the full magnitude of the social, political, and economic forces that have transformed the Arab world and redefined its position within the global order. McMillan has produced a work of exceptional lucidity that scholars, students, and policymakers alike will consult for years to come.” (Kristian Coates Ulrichsen, Fellow of the Middle East, Baker Institute at Rice University, USA, and author of The Gulf States in International Political Economy)
“M.E McMillan's timely book From the First World War to the Arab Spring: What's Really Going on in the Middle East? judiciously puts the current creative crisis in the region in a necessary historical context, pulling us back to the inaugural year of 1914 when the continued legacy of European imperialism was yielding to the rising global American power and the transition framing the eventual formation of postcolonial nation-states that seem to be crumbling right in front of our eyes today. More critical and informed studies like McMillan's are much needed if the cascade of the daily news is not to dull the edge of our critical thinking ahead in an increasingly tumultuous and yet ultimately liberating historical moment.” (Hamid Dabashi, Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature, Columbia University, USA, and author of Being a Muslim in the World)
“To begin understanding why the Middle East is falling apart today, read M.E. McMillan's beautifully written and admirably succinct book From the First World War to the Arab Spring: What's Really Going On in the Middle East? She unravels with verve the clash of empires that preceded the violent dismantling of the Ottoman Empire during World War I. But most importantly, she analyzes with clarity the contradictory principles and conflicting interests that were embedded in the new Middle East. Not only were borders drawn haphazardly at war's end, but also the Great Powers insisted that Middle Eastern peoples take on new identities. Enlightenment concepts such as nationalism, constitutionalism, and separation of church and state were imposed at the point of a gun. Today, that order is in shambles, despite or perhaps because of multiple interventions. McMillan is a wonderful guide. I will be assigning it to my students.” (Joshua Landis, Director of the Centre for Middle Eastern Studies and Associate Professor at the College of International Relations, University of Oklahoma, USA)
“A lively and engaging book that sheds great clarity on a century of Middle Eastern conflict.” (Eugene Rogan, Associate Professor of the Modern History of the Middle East and Director of the Middle East Centre, St Antony's College, University of Oxford, UK, and author of “The Arabs: A History and The Fall of the Ottomans: The Great War in the Middle East”)