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Mapping the Middle East
Zayde Antrim

Mapping the Middle East

Reaktion Books (May 15, 2018)
9781780238500
| Hardcover
336 pages | 190 x 249 mm | USA | English
$ 57.00 | Value: $ 57.00
Dewey 526.0956
LC Classification GA1340.M628 .A58 2018

Genre

  • Geography
  • History

Subject

  • Africa
  • Asia
  • British Mandate of Palestine, 1920-48
  • Cartography
  • Eighteenth Century (1700s)
  • Europe
  • Iran
  • Islam
  • Israel, 1948-
  • Middle East
  • Ninteenth Century (1800s)
  • Ottoman Empire, 1299-1922
  • Palestine
  • Seventeenth Century (1600s)
  • Sixteenth Century (1500s)
  • Türkiye
  • Twentieth Century (1900s)

Plot

Mapping the Middle East explores the many ways people have visualized the vast area lying between the Atlantic Ocean and the Oxus and Indus River Valleys over the past millennium. By analyzing maps produced from the eleventh century on, Zayde Antrim emphasizes the deep roots of mapping in a region too often considered unexamined and unchanging before the modern period. As Antrim argues, better-known maps from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries—a period coinciding with European colonialism and the rise of the nation-state—not only obscure this rich past, but also constrain visions for the region’s future.

Organized chronologically, Mapping the Middle East addresses the medieval “Realm of Islam;” the sixteenth- to eighteenth-century Ottoman Empire; French and British colonialism through World War I; nationalism in modern Turkey, Iran, and Israel/Palestine; and alternative geographies in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Vivid color illustrations throughout allow readers to compare the maps themselves with Antrim’s analysis. Much more than a conventional history of cartography, Mapping the Middle East is an incisive critique of the changing relationship between maps and belonging in a dynamic world region over the past thousand years.