{"id":36071,"date":"2025-02-07T08:17:15","date_gmt":"2025-02-07T06:17:15","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/?p=36071"},"modified":"2025-02-14T19:30:39","modified_gmt":"2025-02-14T17:30:39","slug":"resilient-cartographies-histories-of-the-persian-gulf","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/resilient-cartographies-histories-of-the-persian-gulf\/","title":{"rendered":"Resilient Cartographies: Histories of the Persian Gulf"},"content":{"rendered":"<h5><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Two new histories of the Persian Gulf challenge often told narratives of the channeling of sudden petroleum wealth into visible, even spectacular, infrastructural development over the past 80 years.<\/span><\/h5>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The Center of the World: A Global History of the Persian Gulf from the Stone Age to the Present<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, by Allen James Fromherz<br \/>\n<\/span><a href=\"https:\/\/www.ucpress.edu\/books\/the-center-of-the-world\/hardcover\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">University of California Press<\/span><\/a><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> 2024<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><br \/>\n<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">ISBN 9780520398559<\/span><\/p>\n<p><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Making Space for the Gulf: Histories of regionalism and the Middle East<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, by Arang Keshavarzian<br \/>\n<\/span><a href=\"https:\/\/www.sup.org\/books\/middle-east-studies\/making-space-gulf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Stanford University Press<\/span><\/a><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> 2024<br \/>\n<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">ISBN 9781503633346<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<h4><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Todd Reisz<\/span><\/h4>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Several years ago, a UAE government\u2013sponsored event highlighted how the country\u2019s cities reveal a local history of religious tolerance. Among the speakers was a historian of the Persian Gulf, after whose talk the moderator posed a few perfunctory questions about the past. Setting up for his final question, the moderator sat up straighter and smiled: \u201cWhat is your favorite place in the UAE?\u201d The present tense seemed to catch the historian off guard, now expected to depart from the historical record toward what might seem like current-day messaging \u2014 the association being that religious tolerance begets great cities with favorite places.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">After a pause, the historian responded along the lines of: \u201cWell, I suppose I\u2019d choose a place in the past \u2026 Dubai Creek \u2026 watching the ships come in, the cargo being unloaded from all over the world.\u201d The answer referred to Dubai\u2019s historical harbor \u2014 on water, not land \u2014 whose coordinates might persist but whose spirited ensemble of stevedores and crewmembers no longer does. That onstage unease with the present came to mind several times while reading two recent histories of the Persian Gulf.<\/span><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_36093\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-36093\" style=\"width: 400px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.ucpress.edu\/books\/the-center-of-the-world\/hardcover\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-36093\" src=\"https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/The-Center-of-the-World-Allen-James-Fromherz-9780520398559.jpg\" alt=\"The Center of the World Allen James Fromherz - 9780520398559\" width=\"400\" height=\"604\" srcset=\"https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/The-Center-of-the-World-Allen-James-Fromherz-9780520398559.jpg 500w, https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/The-Center-of-the-World-Allen-James-Fromherz-9780520398559-199x300.jpg 199w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 400px) 100vw, 400px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-36093\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>The Center of the World<\/em> is published by <a href=\"https:\/\/www.ucpress.edu\/books\/the-center-of-the-world\/hardcover\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">UC Press<\/a>.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">In writing history, the authors of these books make express choices to address a present, specifically one largely dominated by a narrowly crafted narrative. That narrative often gets told as the channeling of sudden petroleum wealth into visible, even spectacular, infrastructural development over the past 80 years. History, in other words, arises out of the visible construction and urbanization of cities like Doha, Dubai, and Abu Dhabi, or in the failure of such plans to be realized, such as on Kish Island in Iran. Both of these writers want to release the Persian Gulf from that telling. To do this, they each suggest how history can offer different, maybe even liberating, ways to see<\/span> <span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">these cities today. Results in both cases involve some awkwardness, perhaps validating the hesitation of the historian at the event but in no way undermining their own arduous work and the valor of the task they put before them.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">In <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The Center of the World<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, Allen James Fromherz sets out to resituate the Persian Gulf by resetting its relationship with the rest of the world, namely by asserting that it is really important. Not in the way that geopolitical strategists have in the recent past \u2014 that is as the pumping heart of our petroleum-addicted societies, but rather, on the contrary, by conjuring up a deeper history. Fromherz collapses the region\u2019s petroleum-extraction years into a few mentions in a book that claims to cover from the Stone Age to the present. The result, he seems to suggest, might help to suture \u201can artificial line \u2026 [that] like a surgeon\u2019s wound, has split the belly of the Gulf in two, between Iran to the east and the Arab states to the west.\u201d Each of his chapters is named after a port city, on one side or the other of that line, which characterizes and reigns during a historical era. As much as things have changed, Fromherz argues, historical approaches to trade and survival remain traceable in Gulf societies today.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">In <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Making Space for the Gulf<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, Arang Keshavarzian focuses mostly on the era from which Fromherz turns away. For Keshavarzian, the way to address the problems of a reigning narrative is to problematize it, namely by scrutinizing it through a telling less constricted by chronology and more transparent about his own search for a history. He reminds the reader that geography is a kind of writing, on land itself. And therefore, like history, it is an act of construction. Rather than constructing an alternative narrative, he aims to reopen a \u201cboundless regionalism.\u201d His work can be regarded as a reverse engineering, to borrow the term from Robert Vitalis in his <\/span><a href=\"https:\/\/www.sup.org\/books\/middle-east-studies\/americas-kingdom\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">work on Saudi Arabia and American oilmen<\/span><\/a><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">. Whereas Fromherz insists on a new narrative, Keshavarzian remains suspicious of any narrative. You could say, he just wants to free the Persian Gulf, to let it ebb and flow on its own terms.<\/span><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_36094\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-36094\" style=\"width: 400px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.sup.org\/books\/middle-east-studies\/making-space-gulf\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-36094\" src=\"https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/Making-Space-for-the-Gulf-Arang-Keshavarzian.jpg\" alt=\"Making Space for the Gulf - Arang Keshavarzian\" width=\"400\" height=\"600\" srcset=\"https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/Making-Space-for-the-Gulf-Arang-Keshavarzian.jpg 500w, https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/Making-Space-for-the-Gulf-Arang-Keshavarzian-200x300.jpg 200w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 400px) 100vw, 400px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-36094\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>Making Space for the Gulf<\/em> is published by <a href=\"https:\/\/www.sup.org\/books\/middle-east-studies\/making-space-gulf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Stanford<\/a>.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Whether explicitly or not, both writers converse with recent themes in the writing of global history, which, most generally, prioritizes ideas and networks unconstrained by national borders. To work this way, they are indebted to histories composed across other waterbodies \u2014 the Mediterranean Sea and Indian Ocean, for example. One back-cover blurb claims \u201cFromherz does for the Gulf what [the historian Fernand] Braudel did for the Mediterranean.\u201d Keshavarzian refers to the Persian Gulf as an \u201carena,\u201d a metaphor regularly applied in studies of the Indian Ocean. This legacy of history writing opens the door for the writers and their readers to see the Persian Gulf as a connecting point rather than a delimited void.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Moving through more fluid space and time, the books manifest also from voracious reading projects, a sign that it requires access to many minds to write global history. In ways too rarely explored in histories of the Persian Gulf, Fromherz revisits and brings to life medieval texts that remind us that rocky and marshy ports, like Sifar, existed and receded from view long before the settlements that took the spectacular shape of global capitalism today. This combined synthesis is a healthy dose of \u201c<\/span><a href=\"https:\/\/press.princeton.edu\/books\/hardcover\/9780691181202\/timefulness?srsltid=AfmBOorrGoaKBsexjlM4AO3afnFBknechEp2OprNr2lpfeLFtIY27QzK\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">timefulness<\/span><\/a><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u201d to the region. Keshavarzian refers to \u201ca tsunami of knowledge production about the Gulf,\u201d from which he deftly brings forward recent achievements and emphasizes some of the most salient parts. In both books, the strongest, most surprising moments occur when the writers source from texts rarely cited in English-language histories.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">For close observers of the Persian Gulf, there can arise a bewilderment at the ease with which many experts and laypersons alike narrate the region with quick pronouncements. Early on, Keshavarzian notes that just by uttering the name \u201cPersian Gulf,\u201d one \u201ccan raise temperatures\u201d in discussions online or in real life. Even people without lived experience in the region will make sweeping claims to it in one ideological way or another. It can be reason for a historian to remain reticent at certain times. This contentiousness today has more to do with the southern, Arab coastline trapped in a forever present, while the northern, mostly Iranian coastline is blanketed by the past. Both books suggest potential exit ramps from this echo chamber. One way to defuse flare-ups has been to spread history around, or more broadly, to assert that <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">there is history <\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">throughout the Persian Gulf littoral. History permits context; with it, a writer can emphasize continuity or breakage. Fromherz opts for temporal continuity, while Keshavarzian chooses temporal breakage, even if he imagines geographical flow.<\/span><\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<figure id=\"attachment_36096\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-36096\" style=\"width: 1000px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-36096\" src=\"https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/Carte-du-Golf-Persique-1810-Depot-General-de-la-Marine-Paris.jpg\" alt=\"Carte du Golf Persique, 1810 (Depot General de la Marine, Paris).\" width=\"1000\" height=\"738\" srcset=\"https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/Carte-du-Golf-Persique-1810-Depot-General-de-la-Marine-Paris.jpg 1000w, https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/Carte-du-Golf-Persique-1810-Depot-General-de-la-Marine-Paris-600x443.jpg 600w, https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/Carte-du-Golf-Persique-1810-Depot-General-de-la-Marine-Paris-300x221.jpg 300w, https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/Carte-du-Golf-Persique-1810-Depot-General-de-la-Marine-Paris-768x567.jpg 768w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-36096\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Carte du Golf Persique, 1810 (Depot General de la Marine, Paris).<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<hr \/>\n<h4><b>Geography as History<\/b><\/h4>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Geography and history might be faces of the same coin. (Pursued today as distinct fields, they may now be reuniting.) You can\u2019t talk about time without talking about space. You can\u2019t talk about space without accounting for how people and other forces have made it. To expand upon geography as a tool for rereading the Persian Gulf, Fromherz expands the spatial by identifying three distinct geological zones: mountains, marshes, and vast deserts, each with a role in determining fates of those who dare to navigate them. In between these zones, he identifies the Persian Gulf\u2019s \u201cvery narrowness that creates a psychological sense of close encounters \u2026, making it such a rich cauldron of interaction.\u201d This <\/span><a href=\"https:\/\/wwnorton.com\/books\/Guns-Germs-and-Steel\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Jared Diamond<\/span><\/a><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u2013like attention to geography operates, however, as a secondary theme in deference to his overarching objective to reach back in time at an epic-scale.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Keshavarzian is meanwhile preoccupied less with timespan than with how the Persian Gulf, as a body of water, gets spatialized. At the start of his book, he describes the Persian Gulf as three-dimensional movement \u2014 a basin of water that merges into marshlands to the northwest and compresses through the Strait of Hormuz to the east. He looks out at a \u201cmutable, created space that does not exist as a passive stage but is assembled out of human actions.\u201d Keshavarzian provides a date, January 4, 1980, not for when history begins but when \u201can earlier regionalism\u201d was flattened into the abstraction of a US foreign policy. It was a moment when the Gulf\u2019s two-dimensionality on a map fully overshadowed a three-dimensional reality. On that evening, already the next morning in the Persian Gulf, US president Jimmy Carter delivered what later came to be known as the Carter Doctrine. Sitting next to a globe positioned to alert viewers where on Earth he was talking about, the US president equated, and reduced, that part of the world to a US \u201cvital interest.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Keshavarzian calls this conversion an abstraction of the waterbody\u2019s geography into a \u201cunified territorial object ready to be enclosed and captured.\u201d The result is not just some visualization shorthand. It is an abstraction of the Persian Gulf that idealizes a distinct, stable, and secure region; if it is not all of those things at once, then military intervention is required. One may argue that most inhabitants of the Gulf are unfamiliar with the Carter Doctrine, but Keshavarzian\u2019s point is that this narrative of containment is pervasive enough to shape not only how the world perceives the region but also how lives are lived there.<\/span><\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<figure id=\"attachment_36097\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-36097\" style=\"width: 1000px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-36097\" src=\"https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/Dubai-photo-Uhg1234-.jpg\" alt=\"Dubai - photo Uhg1234\" width=\"1000\" height=\"667\" srcset=\"https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/Dubai-photo-Uhg1234-.jpg 1000w, https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/Dubai-photo-Uhg1234--600x400.jpg 600w, https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/Dubai-photo-Uhg1234--300x200.jpg 300w, https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/Dubai-photo-Uhg1234--768x512.jpg 768w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-36097\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Dubai today (photo Uhg1234).<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<hr \/>\n<h4><b>Bullseye<\/b><\/h4>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">You\u2019ve most likely encountered advertisements that visualize the Persian Gulf as the bullseye of a target. The Persian Gulf is pinned as the mark inside concentric circles that radiate outward: to promote the service reach of a Gulf airlines; to tout globally relevant real estate investment in Dubai; or to pitch that Qatar, and now Saudi Arabia, will host millions of nearby fans for professional soccer. The website for Dubai\u2019s airport authority describes the city\u2019s \u201cgeocentric location,\u201d a four-hour flight from one-third of the world\u2019s population. The message is that Gulf cities adjoin a great deal of the world. Even if you suspect that the bullseye is <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">terra nullius<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, it is in the very least girdled by the world\u2019s densest assembly of humanity.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">To illustrate Fromherz\u2019s claim for the center, the book\u2019s dustjacket references the bullseye, with the Persian Gulf coastline reverberating outward over the cover. Already with the book\u2019s first sentence, however, centrality gets qualified: \u201cThe Persian Gulf is the center of world history.\u201d So now the claim is merely <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">historical<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, not, say, <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">political<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> or <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">financial<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">. From there onward, the text is peppered with chronological superlatives that might remind readers of other regional marketing campaigns that advertise the first, tallest, biggest, etc. On page seven, the Persian Gulf is \u201cthe world\u2019s first global sea\u201d; then on page eight it is a \u201cliquid launchpad for so much of history.\u201d At the start, the author confidently states that ports around the liquid offered \u201cthe world\u2019s first and oldest example of globalizing space \u2014 and non-Imperial at that.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Fromherz\u2019s pre-global global world begins in Dilmun, in current-day Bahrain, where he claims \u201ctrade first emerged\u201d as a waystation between Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley. It\u2019s another untested factoid, but one that nevertheless captures the Gulf as an in-between. However, if one is compelled to identify a center, then there must also be a periphery. Fromherz attempts to avoid labeling the rest of the world periphery through a sleight of logic, namely that the Gulf is the center because its inhabitants always exploit its status as the fringe, or \u201cthe periphery of empires.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Many of Fromherz\u2019s assertions remain under-explained, but they nevertheless accompany an enthusiastic, even contrarian, survey of early activity on and around the Gulf. He even finds a morsel of contemporary Western moralism directed toward the region, in <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Paradise Lost<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> no less, where John Milton remarks of the \u201csinful decadence\u201d in Hormuz. It\u2019s difficult to imagine 17<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">th<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">-century bling on today\u2019s scorched and craggy Hormuz Island. While Milton\u2019s censure seems inconceivable today, it highlights how fortune in the Persian Gulf has drifted like weather clouds from one port of call to the next. I read also with fascination of the rise and fall of <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">bandars <\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">(Persian ports often hemmed in by moutains), of Basra\u2019s geological drift away from the Gulf coast, and about just how dependent the Abbasids were on Persian Gulf trade.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<h4><b>Headed to Dubai<\/b><\/h4>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Whereas history has often been a domain for accounting the world\u2019s modernization, global histories provide the opportunity to break through this limited lens. In this regard, I am sympathetic toward Fromherz\u2019s goal to look for echoes and continuity through a longer past and to reinfuse a geography with histories beyond ones visually evident today. I closed the book with some questions about what we are to make of recurrences, especially as committed as Fromherz appears to be in placing them in current imaginaries about the region. Recurrence, however, often feels like permanency, as when he identifies a \u201cGulf model of distinctive cosmopolitanism and autonomous ports\u201d that reaches to the 900 C.E.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">That apparent model \u2014 he refers also to a Dubai model \u2014 spans \u201cfrom ancient Dilmun on Bahrain through medieval Islamic Basra and Siraf to Muscat, Hormuz, and Dubai,\u201d and has \u201ccreated a globally connected Gulf culture dependent on the free flow of people, commerce and ideas.\u201d Each of those port cities mentioned is a chapter title, with an apparent culmination in the final Dubai chapter, as if the city is the manifested vessel of history. History can be described as a lens through which one can observe the world as an accumulation of temporal processes, but is there an allowance here for sediments to erode and shift? Although global, or deep, histories strive for expansiveness, the results can be the opposite \u2014 compressing eras into a few hundred pages and leaving no room for absence, standstills and abandonments. Does tracing continuity necessarily lead us toward the <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">always<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">? Claims to continuity can start to vaporize into what could be a universalism. \u201cUltimately,\u201d Fromherz writes early on, \u201chuman adaptation and adaptability have been the keys to long-term success in this region.\u201d That also summarizes Darwinism.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">In the Dubai chapter, Fromherz writes, \u201cGulf culture has always favored informal networks over formal institutions.\u201d Such a statement runs the risk of being a banal truism or airbrushed history. This assertion in particular runs counter to how governance is experienced by most people in Gulf cities. Elsewhere in the book, he refers to someone else\u2019s coined neologism \u2014 the so-called \u201cDubai Model\u201d \u2014 which, for all its misrepresentations, does encapsulate the historical tendency toward more centralized, and therefore formalized, government. \u201cGulf society today,\u201d Fromherz asserts, \u201cstill rests on long-term continuities such as informal institutions and practices that link citizens, foreigners, and rulers.\u201d Of course, there are relational transactions and decentralized ways in which residents work together, but this can only happen after centralized processes have allowed the vast majority of them to be there in the first place.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Dubai\u2019s professed formal institutions are also part of a seventy-year campaign to formalize governmental oversight \u2014 whether in monitoring hygiene at slaughterhouses and eateries in the 1950s or through assertive Covid measures in 2021. Regulation is part of what makes the city so appealing to the more fortunate newcomers: you know the rules and how to arrange things like residency papers and utilities. You pay published fees, not negotiated bribes. Formalized institutions exemplify state modernization programs which are based in colonial measures (which Fromherz often seems ready to play down), which consequently are based on histories of extraction, that age of history he\u2019s chosen to demote.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Arguing for continuity can cascade into a tale of timelessness, into an essentialism that begins to emerge in such statements as, \u201cUnder the surface of hyperglobalization, the distinctiveness of Gulf communities and Gulf citizens remains.\u201d Wilfred Thesiger wrote similar things before the there was a term like \u201chyperglobalization.\u201d The mental image here is that of a layered being, outwardly open to perpetual openness with an innate closedness underneath. Fromherz conjures an identity that holds the two simultaneously and apart, with no admission that identity can be anything other than monumental and unchanging. Similar sentiment, for instance, can be found as themes permeating through heritage museums throughout the Gulf. And for all his claims to continuity, aren\u2019t then the assertions of \u201cfirsts\u201d in trade and globalizing space then suspect? In her <\/span><a href=\"https:\/\/global.oup.com\/academic\/product\/before-european-hegemony-9780195067743?cc=pl&amp;lang=en&amp;\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">book on early world systems<\/span><\/a><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, Janet Abu Lughod wrote, \u201cThus, if it is possible to argue that a world began in [one] century, it is equally plausible to argue that it existed much earlier.\u201d Is Fromherz\u2019s reach to the Stone Age merely to assert that he can identify the firsts because he encapsulates <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">all<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> history?<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">It\u2019s hardly surprising that Fromherz\u2019s chronicle of scruffy ports concludes with Dubai, a city he observes functions as a \u201cbyword\u201d for other cities in the region. The chapter portrays the city as manifestation through a regional refinement of techniques and strategies. This would have made for a more rigorous argument if it had not seemed that Dubai\u2019s leadership has it all figured out. There\u2019s little room to consider ongoing and future change, much less the criticism and hardship that persist. At one point he recognizes Gulf cities\u2019 dependency on \u201cthe labor and expertise of immigrants from the rest of the world.\u201d He briefly mentions reports of exploitation and labor abuses. I realize a history is not required to focus on these matters. However, when the next paragraph couches them in \u201ca long history of importing labor from abroad\u201d without much more than that, I\u2019m left to question why and how he frames these contentious topics. To see today\u2019s issues arising from a deeper history than oil extractions \u2014 beyond even colonial networks \u2014 is a point to be made, but how does that shape a reading of unfair labor practices today? What does merely mentioning a \u201clong history\u201d afford us?<\/span><\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<figure id=\"attachment_27145\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-27145\" style=\"width: 1000px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-27145\" src=\"https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/Abu-Dhabi-skyline-seen-from-Saadiyat-island-Abu-Dhabi-photo-Typhoonski.jpg\" alt=\"Abu Dhabi skyline seen from Saadiyat island Abu Dhabi photo Typhoonski\" width=\"1000\" height=\"667\" srcset=\"https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/Abu-Dhabi-skyline-seen-from-Saadiyat-island-Abu-Dhabi-photo-Typhoonski.jpg 1000w, https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/Abu-Dhabi-skyline-seen-from-Saadiyat-island-Abu-Dhabi-photo-Typhoonski-600x400.jpg 600w, https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/Abu-Dhabi-skyline-seen-from-Saadiyat-island-Abu-Dhabi-photo-Typhoonski-300x200.jpg 300w, https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldmarkaz\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/06\/Abu-Dhabi-skyline-seen-from-Saadiyat-island-Abu-Dhabi-photo-Typhoonski-768x512.jpg 768w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-27145\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Abu Dhabi skyline seen from Saadiyat island Abu Dhabi (photo Typhoonski).<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<hr \/>\n<h4><b>Between Iran and the Arab Gulf States<\/b><\/h4>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Keshavarzian\u2019s argument does not lead to a concluding analysis of Dubai, but it relies on that city as that recurring byword for the region. He digests an abundance of recent work on contemporary Dubai, a performance which intelligently highlights aspects of that work. Still I wonder whether Keshavarzian could have provided some fresher perspective on the contemporary experience of the Gulf, for example from less documented vantage points looking toward Dubai. This might have revealed just how pervasive reigning narrative can be.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Some of Keshavarzian\u2019s most interesting moments occur when he cites primary and secondary Iranian sources, rather than the great ocean of Western presses. For example, he corrects the historical record about the rise of the region\u2019s largest port facilities at Dubai\u2019s Port Jebel Ali, by expanding our understanding of the high-stakes maritime brinkmanship from which it rose, namely that the Iranian government had similar ambitions on Kish Island. This is an example of the intersections and correspondence between the Gulf\u2019s northern and southern shores that Keshavarzian seeks to restore in telling of a regional history. The book includes an entertaining sidebar about Kish, often portrayed as a last-gasp attempt by Iran\u2019s Pahlavi monarchy for global relevance. Keshavarzian\u2019s entertaining biography of the island, oscillating between centrality and periphery, serves as a parable for just how malleable geography can be.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">In recounting his own uneventful visit to Kish by boat, Keshavarzian observes his fellow travelers whose \u201ctime seemed to be controlled by someone or something else.\u201d There\u2019s a reference to how these people hiding in the shade take part in smuggling networks, or at least small-scale trade markets. Such markets on the Gulf\u2019s northern shores kept southern ports running before oil profits were more secure. As Keshavarzian observes, they still operate today with a constant gargle of cigarettes and home furnishings that maintain connections between north and south coasts. I paused at Keshavarzian\u2019s observation of these small players in the bigger game. Their movement is shaped by restriction, laced with boredom and fear. The writer\u2019s keen observation made me curious to read more of his floating vantage point set at eye level.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">There are hardship and risks in immigrating to today\u2019s Doha and Dubai, and there must have been as well in medieval Sifar. These toils aren\u2019t the focus in either book. Again, I don\u2019t argue they have to be. But their absence does tell us something about reigning, state-supported narratives, and whether we might be able to live outside them. Cities become rich and relevant and eventually collapse into irrelevance, but the people in them remain largely unaccounted for. I realize that reading a history \u201cfrom below\u201d of 10th-century Sifar might not be able to bring much to light on this matter from available sources. Nevertheless, the risks of the migrant arise as collateral erasure when they disappear in written histories of cities.<\/span><\/p>\n<h4><b>Seeing for Oneself<\/b><\/h4>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">In histories that take on wider scopes, global networks and the planetary movement of people tend to flatten into arrows on a map. This tendency denies that migration has less to do with movement than the pursuit of finding a home. Fromherz observes a \u201clong history\u201d in the matter, but he does not assess the harm that these rather recent systems have inflicted on many people. These labor and migration patterns arise out of the aspects of history from which he wants to shift our focus. Keshavarzian refers to \u201cnew legal categories of natives and foreigners [that] had far-reaching ramifications for the circulatory labor migration that had long knitted together the Gulf littoral.\u201d In other words, the very nation-making made the 20<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">th<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">-century migrant as we know her today.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">So often the lived experience of migration is reduced to movement, overlooking the desire just to live somewhere or, worse, the drudgery of delay or the hiding in fear. In the last months, in the aftermath of Bashar Al Assad\u2019s swift departure from Damascus, the Barsha neighborhood of Dubai has come to mind, where such liveliness is matched only in the streets around that old harbor Dubai Creek. Fifteen years ago, Al Barsha was quiet, not yet swept into the city\u2019s building boom. Then came the Arab Spring and the city\u2019s receipt of Syrian people and money. Today Al Barsha is known for Syrian restaurants and shops. There are also Korean, Bosnian, and Tunisian storefronts, and a Starbucks. Every night storefronts glow and fill up with customers. Who knows how many Syrians have found refuge in Al Barsha, filling the curtained apartments above. Below on the sidewalks, Syrians I know smile at the semblance to Damascus. Migration in this regard is settling for a notion of home that spans distances. Twice, Fromherz refers to precious wood being stripped from ships to build multi-story houses in port cities. One should note that the conversion was not the other way around.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Keshavarzian addresses movement not so much as the flesh of his plot but its skeletal structure, that is his own mobility, or immobility, whether it is physical or optical. In his attempt at opening the Persian Gulf to vaster interpretations, he pursues his \u201cboundless regionalism\u201d though without relinquishing to a geographical nihilism. There is a place, however much in formation, that can still be touched and lived. With precision and some confessed extemporization, he charts an artful approach to the Persian Gulf, one that foregrounds history writing as an act of contemplation and finding one\u2019s bearings. The region is in movement because the humans who look at it are in movement. His perspective as a writer is one \u201cthat fluctuates over time, and depending on where one stands.\u201d In this way, scales of distance, and of time, become relational and contingent. The writer\u2019s standpoint can be both evident and multidirectional.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Though the Persian Gulf is neither center nor periphery for Keshavarzian, it is personal. Another recurring theme in global history is that its writers reveal how they relate to the topic and its geography. For Keshavarzian, the cities of the Gulf became a migration story at one point he could not enter. At the end of his book, it is his own mobility, or immobility, at play. He recounts a reported affair from 2017, when his application for a residency visa was denied for a work term at his employer-university\u2019s satellite campus in Abu Dhabi. Fromherz recalls his \u201chands-off\u201d fellowship enjoyed at the same university, but that description took on new meaning for Keshavarzian. For the latter, the rejection is a way of entering the present, a reminder that our vantage points confront blind spots and vanishing points, but the kinds that challenge or nullify reigning narratives, in his case dealing with the adjudicators of Western liberalism.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">If writing history is an act of construction, then it can also be very much a part of a struggle, against the grain of narratives whose pervasiveness is hard to pin down. Keshavarzian both questions the existence of a particular region and examines it as if it does exist. His is a history that does not dabble in predeterminism. He calls for an \u201cunmooring [of] our perspective,\u201d not so that we take on a godlike aerial view but so that we acknowledge our own pivots, turns, and displacements. \u201cI had to sit with the binary interpretations imposed by the powerful in Tehran, Abu Dhabi, Washington, and London but tried to insist on the multitude of histories and conceptions of space and belonging.\u201d At a moment when his very presence and value at a university were being tested, he reveals he also saw a chance to \u201cinsist\u201d on other realities he had witnessed.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Both writers assert that we all formulate a history we may not ourselves write down. In regard to Fromherz\u2019s enriching accounts of Siraf, Dilmun, and other port cities nearly entirely sedimented into the earth today: if they don\u2019t have to perform as the loci of an enduring, rough-hewn character, then might they contribute to how one looks out at the world, to how one sees water and land as witnesses in and characters of human-written history? A global history is among other things an acknowledgment of one\u2019s place in the world \u2014 but not so much the coordinates that measure your distance from a pinpoint. Rather one\u2019s vantage point is a stocktaking of whence one has come and to where one plans to go, in time and in space. The view before you shapes your response. A global history as a way of simply moving through the world, of engaging with other people, is a lesson not so much with an legible assertion but of a resilient cartography, for engaging a world redolent of buoyancy and cruelty. It offers a way to reconcile the fact that one\u2019s vantage point is both essential and infinitesimal.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>History writing opens the door for the writers and their readers to see the Persian Gulf as a connecting point rather than a delimited 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