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U.S. involvement in the Middle East has brought the region into the
media spotlight and made it a hot topic in American college
classrooms. At the same time, anthropology-a discipline committed
to on-the-ground research about everyday lives and social
worlds-has increasingly been criticized as "useless" or "biased" by
right-wing forces. What happens when the two concerns meet, when
such accusations target the researchers and research of a region so
central to U.S. military interests? This book is the first academic
study to shed critical light on the political and economic
pressures that shape how U.S. scholars research and teach about the
Middle East. Lara Deeb and Jessica Winegar show how Middle East
politics and U.S. gender and race hierarchies affect scholars
across their careers-from the first decisions to conduct research
in the tumultuous region, to ongoing politicized pressures from
colleagues, students, and outside groups, to hurdles in sharing
expertise with the public. They detail how academia, even within
anthropology, an assumed "liberal" discipline, is infused with
sexism, racism, Islamophobia, and Zionist obstruction of any
criticism of the Israeli state. Anthropology's Politics offers a
complex portrait of how academic politics ultimately hinders the
education of U.S. students and potentially limits the public's
access to critical knowledge about the Middle East.
U.S. involvement in the Middle East has brought the region into the
media spotlight and made it a hot topic in American college
classrooms. At the same time, anthropology-a discipline committed
to on-the-ground research about everyday lives and social
worlds-has increasingly been criticized as "useless" or "biased" by
right-wing forces. What happens when the two concerns meet, when
such accusations target the researchers and research of a region so
central to U.S. military interests? This book is the first academic
study to shed critical light on the political and economic
pressures that shape how U.S. scholars research and teach about the
Middle East. Lara Deeb and Jessica Winegar show how Middle East
politics and U.S. gender and race hierarchies affect scholars
across their careers-from the first decisions to conduct research
in the tumultuous region, to ongoing politicized pressures from
colleagues, students, and outside groups, to hurdles in sharing
expertise with the public. They detail how academia, even within
anthropology, an assumed "liberal" discipline, is infused with
sexism, racism, Islamophobia, and Zionist obstruction of any
criticism of the Israeli state. Anthropology's Politics offers a
complex portrait of how academic politics ultimately hinders the
education of U.S. students and potentially limits the public's
access to critical knowledge about the Middle East.
The Egyptian art world is the oldest and largest in the Arab Middle
East. Its artists must reckon with the histories of ancient Egypt,
European modernism, anti-colonial nationalism, and state
socialism-all in the context of a growing neoliberal economy marked
by American global dominance. At this crucial intersection of
culture, politics, and economy, Egypt's art and artists provide
unique insight into current struggles for cultural identity and
sovereignty in the Middle East. This book examines the heated
cultural politics in today's Arab world, and tells how art-making
has become an unexpectedly central part of that. It offers a lively
analysis of the battles between artists, curators, and audiences
over cultural authenticity, cultural policy, public art in a
changing urban Egypt, and the new global marketing of Egyptian art.
The art world it shows powerfully exemplifies how people in the
Middle East reckon with global transformations that are changing
how culture is made in societies with colonial and socialist pasts.
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