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(Re)Made
in the USA: Middle East Studies in the Global Era
Lisa Hajjar
and Steve Niva
Current
anxieties about the state of Middle East studies reflect the dramatic
end of the Cold War and the inexorable search for a new mission
to justify the global projection of US power. It is not surprising
that Middle East studies in the US is grappling with profound
questions about its raison d'etre as an academic field
Over the last two decades, a number of presidents
of the Middle East Studies Association (MESA) have used their
platform at annual meetings to express concern about decline in
the field.1 One is reminded of the Ottomans
who, according to many (now discredited) accounts, were also in
perpetual decline. Recently, though, this theme has acquired a
new tenor of urgency as people involved in area studies wrestle
with the implications of what is popularly termed "globalization."
The question is if area studies as a distinct form of international
scholarship has outlived its utility. Rashid Khalidi captured
the mood with the title of his 1994 MESA presidential address:
"Is there a future for Middle East studies?"2
This issue of the magazine attempts a critical evaluation of
the state of Middle East studies by revisiting questions and themes
explored in a 1975 issue on the "Middle East Studies Network"
(MERIP, no. 38). The earlier issue captures a moment when the
field was still dominated by a relatively small group of driving
personalities. It traces the study of the Middle East in the US
back to the colonial missionary movements of the 19th century,
but concentrates on the institutionalization of Middle East area
studies since World War II, highlighting the close links between
the field and government and/or corporate interests. Although
the field has undergone some striking transformations since 1975,
notably in terms of the diversification of membership and scholarly
agendas, academic developments continue to be conditioned by global
power relations, events and, most immediately, US policy concerns
and interests.
Current anxieties about the state of the field reflect the dramatic
end of the Cold War and the inexorable search for a new mission
to justify the global projection of US power. It is not surprising
that Middle East studies in the US is grappling with profound
questions about its raison d'etre as an academic field.
Of course, the field has never been monolithic, and many of those
who were once on the critical edge have achieved prominence in
the contemporary "network." This article focuses on developments
in Middle East studies in the US, highlighting the last 20 years.
The Early Years
"Area studies" was created as an interdisciplinary niche in the
US academy in the World War II era and its aftermath. The Cold War
politics of anticommunism and Soviet containment were central to
this early history. The process was set in motion by what Bruce
Cumings has referred to as the "state/intelligence/foundation nexus,"
which orchestrated the production of "area" expertise.3
Although geopolitical considerations were the inspiration, fields
were organized on the intellectual premise that "areas" were sufficiently
distinguished from one another to warrant a regionally-focused perspective.
As Irene Gendzier extensively documents in Managing Political
Change: Social Scientists and the Third World, area scholarship
largely took its institutional organization and theoretical cues
from the shifting imperatives of the US state to pursue its Cold
War agenda.4
Middle East area studies began in 1946 with the establishment
of a training program in international administration at Columbia
University, and Army Specialized Training Programs for languages
at Princeton and the Universities of Indiana, Michigan and Pennsylvania.
In 1947, Princeton founded the first interdisciplinary program
specializing in the modern and contemporary Middle East.5
The "Sputnik crisis" in 1957--the unexpected launching of a
Soviet rocket into space well before US readiness to do the same--gave
area studies its biggest boost with the passage of Title VI of
the National Defense Education Act in 1958.6
By 1961, courses on the Middle East were being offered at 180
colleges and universities around the country. The bulk of Title
VI funding has supported area centers in 11 world areas (including
the Middle or Near East) and several "international studies" centers
organized around issues rather than geography.7
By the early 1960s, eight centers had been established or reoriented
to study the modern Middle East.
In 1960, under the auspices of the newly-established Joint Committee
on the Near and Middle East of the Social Science Research Council
(SSRC) and the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS), deliberations
to create an association for Middle East scholars began. From
these talks, MESA was born on December 9, 1966. The founding fathers8
were a combination of classical Orientalists and social scientists,
indicating the field's efforts to bridge--and fuse--disparate
perspectives and backgrounds.
Government largesse for Middle East studies was limited by many
more pressing demands emanating from US involvement in hot wars,
revolutions and foreign policy crises in other regions. Yet the
US had an established interest in the region's oil resources and
"political stability," which served to maintain funding and shape
many scholars' agendas. Some scholars took issue with aspects
of US policy and distinguished their own agendas from those of
the state, but very few publicly challenged the powerful links
between the academy and national security interests.
The guiding paradigms of social science research were beholden
to a Western ideology of "developmentalism" inherited from 19th
century assumptions of social evolution and Western superiority
over non-Western societies.9 The US variant
of developmentalism, "modernization theory," combined scholarly
inquiry about the "backwardness" of non-Western regions with policy-oriented
recommendations to foster the replication of liberal capitalist
societies in the West. Daniel Lerner's The Passing of Traditional
Society: Modernizing the Middle East was exemplary of this
approach.10 Ignoring the often violent social
transformations brought about by colonial expansion and global
capitalist penetration, modernization theorists envisaged development
as an incremental process of internal transformation whereby "modern"
values and practices are diffused to receptive local elites through
greater integration into the Western system.11
It was assumed that democracy and economic takeoff would follow.
By the end of the decade, however, such liberal optimism in
Middle East studies had been diminished by slow economic growth
and the rise of authoritarian states, as well as by the ascendance
of a conservative version of modernization theory exemplified
by Samuel Huntington's work which prioritized the maintenance
of "order" over change.12 Needless to say, this
new conservative emphasis dovetailed nicely with US policy concerns
for stability and counterrevolution in the region.
Cracks in the "Network"
By the late 1960s, domestic sociopolitical unrest spurred by the
civil rights and antiwar movements was taking its toll on the US
academy. The role of the scholar was becoming a subject of heated
debate, with increasingly vocal criticism directed toward those
whose output was either geared toward a pro-government agenda or
premised on the assumption that a Western capitalist model could
and should be universalized. The political views and scholarly work
of some of the doyens of Middle East studies and their proteges
were being challenged by others seeking to revamp the relationship
between the US and the region. Critics on the left drew upon concepts
such as "imperialism," "underdevelopment" and "dependency" to challenge
the received wisdom about development and its barriers.
An early challenge to the Middle East studies establishment
materialized in 1971 with the formation of the Middle East Research
and Information Project (MERIP). The founders, New Left academics
and activists, wanted to generate a literature that would reflect
both a reality that they had come to know during time spent in
the region (some of the original members were returning Peace
Corps volunteers) and the anti-imperialist politics they espoused.13
The collective began publishing MERIP Reports (subsequently Middle
East Report), the longest running progressive publication focusing
on the region.
Another challenge, this one more squarely anchored in the academy,
was mounted by several dozen leftist scholars who, at the 1977
MESA meeting, formed the Alternative Middle East Studies Seminar
(AMESS). They were critical of the orientalism and pro-capitalist
bias of mainstream scholarship and the extent of the profession's
complicity or silence in government and corporate policies in
the Middle East. They sought to draw attention to women, peasants,
the urban poor, and other marginalized groups, and to make issues
like the Arab-Israeli conflict part of the intellectual agenda.
Those involved in MERIP and AMESS, along with insurgent scholars
in Britain and elsewhere, were motivated politically and intellectually
by a sense of solidarity with the peoples of the region, most
significantly in support of the Palestinian struggle, but including
other anti-imperialist forces as well. Although AMESS formally
lasted only a few years, it was not for lack of commitment. Rather,
the "we" of Middle East studies, as represented by MESA membership,
was changing. Growing numbers of critical scholars, including
people with personal ties to the region, women and graduate students
were joining, and articulating increasingly vocal critiques of
US policy and orientalism.
Progressive scholarship on the Middle East was never a major
current in the field, but by the 1970s it was making its mark
as part of a broad New Left intellectual agenda. Leftist debates
over political economy approaches included Marxist-influenced
scholars in the region. The influence of "dependency theory" coming
out of Latin American studies inverted many of the assumptions
of modernization theory: societies were not intrinsically "backward"
nor was the West the source of relief; rather, the Third World
had been underdeveloped precisely as a result of integration into
the global capitalist system. Readings of Marx's early writings
on "Asia" against his corpus on capitalism provided a backdrop
for modes of production debates in some quarters of Middle East
studies, inspiring new assessments of the Ottoman and colonial
periods.14 Of more contemporary relevance, the
consolidation of oil-based rentier states and the transnational
migrations of labor and wealth provided distinctive regional imperatives
to political economy analyses.
Leftists, however, were not in agreement on many points. The
"classical" Marxist left subjected dependency theory to withering
attack on the grounds that the latter substituted a moral critique
of imperialism for a more accurate analysis of the dynamic nature
of capitalism and the possibilities for class struggle. These
two trends were at sharp odds over the endorsement of state autonomy
and Third World nationalism.15
Challenging Orientalism
The publication in 1978 of Edward Said's Orientalism was
a seminal event, causing lasting reverberations throughout the academy.
Said charged that Western pursuits of truth and knowledge were infused
with racist power and cultural supremacy. His interventions in matters
so central to Middle East studies (in addition to his political
outspokenness on behalf of Palestinian rights) stimulated new scholarly
activity in previously un- or under-explored directions as Orientalism
became a model for investigating the relationship between scholarly
production and imperial power. Timothy Mitchell's Colonizing
Egypt turns the orientalist mirror back on Europe to reveal
the formulation of key modern notions of representation and reality
in the exercise of colonial power over Egypt.16
Said's continuing visibility as a public scholar has proved
inspiring to people working in a wide variety of fields, including
cultural, feminist and post-colonial studies, as well as various
fields of area studies. In South Asian studies, for example, major
conferences and special journals have been devoted to themes in
his work.17 Orientalism, however, inspired
critical and negative reactions as well, ranging from outright
denunciation to more ambiguous concerns that his analysis was
too sweeping to account for the diversity of scholarship on the
region.18 His work also drew fire from some
quarters of the left for his attacks on Marx and his inattention
to political economy, and from some post-structuralists for his
seemingly contradictory embrace of humanist ideals.19
More generally, critical scholarship began to evince a heightened
skepticism toward overly materialist models of human behavior
and casuality and an appreciation for the discursively constructed
nature of power and social formations. Said's work formed part
of a larger shift in literary studies, history and anthropology
animated by post-structuralism, Western feminism and neo-Marxism.
In Middle East studies, this shift inspired methodological innovations
and increasing coverage of previously marginalized subjects 20
Crisis and Transition
More mainstream currents in Middle East studies, although embracing
a wider range of critical perspectives than in the early years,
retained a certain consonance with US political strategy, notably
through continuing commitment to state-led modernization and development.21
During the 1970s, US commitment in the region grew dramatically,
spurred by the "vacuum" left by the British withdrawal from the
Gulf, the rise of Saudi Arabia to global prominence following the
1973 war, and Sadat's embrace of the US during the same period.
In 1979, the fall of the Shah of Iran, one of the US's most
crucial allies and a paragon of Western-style modernization, came
as a shock to many. A review of the literature following the Iranian
revolution leaves the impression of a field of experts rudely
betrayed by their subject. The Iranian revolution proved to be
more decisive to the field than the Arab-Israeli wars of 1967
and '73.22 The post-revolutionary Iranian regime
represented an activist variant of Islam perceived as imminently
threatening to Western interests and pro-Western regimes, notably
those in the oil-rich Gulf. The proliferation of Islamic movements
across the region posed a fundamental challenge to modernization
theory's evolutionary predictions of increasing democratization
and secularization. Needless to say, the study of the rise of
"Muslim fundamentalism" soon became a cottage industry, producing
many less-than-illuminating attempts at explanation.
The concurrent Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the rise of
Reaganism helped set off a new phase of the Cold War in which
the Middle East was accorded a pivotal role. This enhanced the
strategic dimension of Middle East studies. While some scholars
and students of the region hastened to direct their research towards
this more militarized and security-oriented agenda, many other
Middle East scholars rose to the task of countering the virulent
anti-Islamism popular in the media and political circles, even
though their own inclinations were secular, whether liberal or
leftist. There was a growing gap between academic discourse and
the rhetoric surrounding US policy. To some extent, this gap was
filled by the rise of a new breed of "terrorologists" and pseudo-experts
on Middle East politics who took over the task of sanctioning
state policy with their "authoritative" opinions.23
Any assessment of the "state of the field" implies broad generalizations.
Clearly, the field did not become a hotbed of radical anti-Americanism.
But it can be argued that a substantial body of scholarship has
been produced over the last few decades that is markedly more
diverse, critical and independent of US governmental concerns
than was the case in the early years. The nature of an enterprise
that privileges language study and field research as part of the
course of generating knowledge stands in sharp contrast to less-informed
literatures and media driven by agendas of the state.
The View from the Right
The end of the Cold War has left a lacuna, and the Middle East figures
prominently in the US government's search for new enemies. The influence
of the contemporary Middle East studies network is dwarfed by the
financial resources and institutional muscle of right-wing organizations
intent on advancing an ethos of pro-Americanism of the most retrograde
variety in the nation's public fora.
Norvell de Atkine and Daniel Pipes authored a 1996 article which
illuminates right-wing thinking, "Middle Eastern Studies: What
Went Wrong?"24 According to them, Middle East
studies lost its way and became "irrelevant" when it stopped serving
US interests. De Atkine and Pipes argue that Middle East studies
suffers from a misplaced preference for the interests of the peoples
of the region over US interests, and a lack of "common sense"
when it comes to Islam, which leads scholars to function as "countercultural
apologists." They take a negative view of the "indigenization"
of the field, charging that MESA has been transformed from "an
American organization interested in the Middle East to a Middle
Eastern one that happens to meet in the United States."
Other area studies fields have undergone changes similar to
Middle East studies, notably an increasing number of indigenous
scholars, intellectual investments in solidarity politics, critiques
of US policy, and efforts to accommodate perspectives of peoples
from the regions into scholarly frameworks. For right-wingers,
contemporary area studies is part of the landscape of "multiculturalism,"
which has inspired a highly visible and well-endowed backlash
by New Right constituencies. Ultraconservative institutions like
the Heritage Foundation and the National Association of Scholars
adopt a two-pronged approach: encouraging or promoting conservative
scholars to positions of influence, and challenging those "tenured
radicals" who articulate views inimical or hostile to a conservative
agenda. This latter dimension puts the name dropping condemnations
in de Atkine and Pipes' article into perspective, since they have
produced an updated Who's Who list of Middle East studies.
Resurgent Liberalism
The triumphalism following the Cold War clearly has influenced the
relationship between scholarship and US policy. The new "Washington
consensus" reflects a global agenda intent on promoting economic
privatization (i.e., "free markets") and integration (i.e., "free
trade"). Yet, the social devastation and instability that often
accompanies neo-liberal "reforms" needs to be supplemented by market-friendly
forms of political liberalization. It is in this context that one
can understand how issues of democracy, civil society and liberalization
more generally have become an obsession in current debates about
development in the Third World, including some quarters of Middle
East studies. The recent flurry of books, articles and well-funded
projects on these themes is a testimony to the dramatic impact of
this new liberal agenda.25 In many respects, this
has created the possibility for a renewal of a more significant
policy role for Middle East scholars, although the primary obstacle
to the crystallization of a new mission for the field has been the
unwillingness to implement a liberal democratization agenda in US
policy-making on the region.
To be sure, elements of this liberal agenda resonate in the
Middle East, rooted in opposition to the untrammeled power of
authoritarian states and the appalling lack of human and civil
rights across the region. But the scholarship advancing this agenda
tends to resurrect the beliefs of modernization theory among a
new generation of social scientists. The assumption that the experience
of Western capitalist democracy can and should be duplicated throughout
the rest of the world is being reasserted, only now the desirable
transition is not from "tradition" to "modernity" but from "undemocratic"
to "democratic" cultures. The effect of such work, as before,
is that the region is being subjected to Western guidance and
tutelage in the search for "civil society."
The new liberal agenda has been remarkably successful in appropriating
conventionally progressive objectives such as "sustainability,"
"equity" and human rights. It appears as if liberalism is becoming
what Bellamy has called a "meta-ideology": a set of presuppositions
which govern thinking across the ideological spectrum and which
is reflected and refracted in wider discourses.26
The rapid advance of the new liberal zeitgeist illuminates,
by contrast, the current pallor of more critical perspectives
on regional political developments. The contemporary crisis of
Marxism and radical development theory is one factor.27
Another is that while the new fields of cultural and post-colonial
studies appear to be making some inroads into the field, their
anti-representational epistemologies and critiques of enlightenment
values have sharply divided critical scholarship.28
Greater collaboration among critical scholars, however, may result
from the further development of political economy critiques of
the "development industry."29
The End of Area Studies?
Funding, or lack thereof, is a major factor for the future of area
studies. When academic administrators and department heads in the
country's colleges and universities look for fat to trim, these
programs often provide a vulnerable target. More generally, the
financial crises in higher education make it necessary for many
disciplinary departments seeking new hires to look for people who
can handle a broad range of teaching responsibilities, not an area
specialization.30 A central aspect of this problem
is that area-based research and expertise spans two spheres in the
academic landscape: the various social science and humanities disciplines,
and the interdisciplinary fields organized by regions. This dual
positioning raises questions about the past and future of international
scholarship in terms of the allocation of resources (from the government,
foundations and private donors), the changing nature of higher education,
and the larger political context of US relations with the rest of
the world.
In the matter of government funding, many of the resources that
sustain the field (including grants to institutions and individuals)
come from the state. The state expects some benefits in return,
and has been disappointed in its investments in area studies.
In a 1981 Rand study of Title VI, the authors write,
[T]he [area studies] centers should make efforts to
link their programs to more policy-oriented disciplines and help
their students identify and prepare for nonacademic jobs... [There]
is a disjunction between center focus and national need, as defined
by academic, governmental and business employers.31
In 1991, legislation authorized the Department of Defense (DoD)
to administer the National Security Education Program (NSEP), which
supports study abroad and area studies centers. MESA joined the
African and Latin American studies associations to protest both
its administrative location and service requirements for recipient
students (in the DoD or intelligence community); a MESA resolution
passed by the membership in 1993 urged that its members and their
institutions not seek or accept NSEP program or research funding.32
In terms of foundation support, some big changes are being instituted
in line with the "Washington consensus." For example, by the early
1990s, the joint international program of the SSRC-ACLS began
undergoing internal reorganization. Specifically, the Mellon and
Ford Foundations decided that a regional "area" approach was obsolete
in the post-Cold War era, thereby affecting the availability and
use of resources. Intellectual considerations were also at issue;
Kenneth Prewitt, president of SSRC, described the changes as adapting
to the need to "internationalize" area studies to accommodate
changing intellectual priorities, notably cross-regional, transnational,
processual and thematically-focused inquiries.33
This shift involves replacing a series of vertical structures
organized along geographic lines with a horizontal integration
of area expertise throughout the various international programs.
Part of the reevaluation of area studies relates to developments
in academic disciplines. Area studies has remained a "junior partner"
in the "disciplinary mapping of the world."34
Middle East studies successes in satisfying the needs and standards
of the disciplines are subject to debate. Rashid Khalidi offered
a particularly negative view of the field in his 1994 MESA presidential
speech. To counter the perceived weaknesses, he suggested:
[O]ur future lies in being part of the departments
of comparative literature, political science, history or whatever,
and not in remaining in a Middle Eastern ghetto...[T]hese disciplines...
[have] more powerful institutional support, and most of them can
claim to be more universal.35
The rationale for area studies is also being weakened by liberal
approaches. In political science and economics, the big trend is
rational choice; the social scientific search for "homo economicus"
is linked to efforts to cultivate new "globalizable" frameworks
of analysis.36 This shift toward quantitative
methods and paradigms and away from local language and other sources
marks a decontextualization of knowledge and, as such, is inimical
to much of what has come to characterize area studies.37
Some disciplines are being squeezed by these trends, too, notably
anthropology, history and literature, each of which is organized
largely by language and geographic areas and oriented by methodologies
and research agendas that tend to emphasize detail and difference
over generalities and regularities.
There is no reason to assume these changes necessarily signal
an end to the possibilities of continuing work in and on the region.
Rather, the questions we need to be asking are about the institutional
arrangements and political implications of such work. The remapping
of area-based knowledge back into the disciplines to a greater
or lesser extent could have the positive benefit of broadening
awareness of conditions in various areas of the world by strengthening
the basis for critical comparative analysis. Culturally sensitive
international studies, including those of an area-focused variety,
are a prerogative of scholars that provides one of the few means
of continuing to rethink and revise the lines between "us" and
"them" that have long ordered a global hierarchy.38
There is a need, however, for more critical reflection upon
the dominant trends and forces behind this restructuring, namely
the "Washington consensus" and the new global centers of power.
What is being created is a new framework of inquiry to accompany
the project of creating a brave new "world without borders" in
which global capital and elites can roam without restrictions
and populations are kept pacified by market discipline and occasional
elections. The consequences of this new agenda are now being felt
in the Middle East, though in fits and starts, and it may take
time for scholars to deal with its various implications.
Area studies and other forms of international scholarship are,
by definition and history, politicized. For progressive scholars,
the question is how to exploit the porous boundaries between the
academy and the political sphere in ways that befit their commitments.
To these ends, the "internationalization" of area studies has
implications for decentering (geographically) but not depoliticizing
the processes and consequences of knowing.
To realize the political potential of the current generation
of oppositional academics, we must extend our work beyond the
narrow confines of the academy to play a more active role in influencing
public consciousness. (Re)claiming the public sphere for serious
discussion of the affairs of the nation and the place of the US
in the world is the real challenge for progressives, including
those in Middle East studies.
Lisa Hajjar, an editor of this magazine, teaches sociology
at Swarthmore College. Steve Niva, a member of MERIP's
board, is a PhD candidate in political science at Columbia University.
Lisa Hajjar would like to thank Julia Kernochan for invaluable
research assistance. Many people associated with MERIP, past and
present, provided information, suggestions and criticisms. Thanks
also to Bruce Grant, who commented on an earlier version. Steve
Niva would like to thank Simona Sharoni for her assistance
and support.
Endnotes
1 Texts of MESA presidential speeches are published in the
MESA Bulletin. On the theme of decline, see: L. Carl Brown
(1976), who fretted that Middle East studies was in danger of becoming
an isolated academic backwater; Kemal Karpat (1985), who decried
petty academic infighting as an obstruction to true scholarly debate,
thereby weakening the field; Yvonne Haddad (1990), who wondered
about the function of crises to the field and whether Middle East
scholars were driven to the role of ambulance chasers to earn and
justify their keep.
2 See Rashid Khalidi, "Is There a Future for Middle
East Studies," MESA Bulletin, July 1995.
3 Bruce Cumings, "Boundary Displacement: Area Studies
and International Studies during and after the Cold War," Bulletin
for Concerned Asian Scholars, January-March 1997, p. 12.
4 Irene Gendzier, Managing Political Change: Social
Scientists and the Third World (Boulder: Westview, 1985).
Cumings' article details some McCarthy-era purges of Asia Studies
scholars and the intimate relations between certain heads of research
centers and security institutions. For this period, see Ellen
W. Schrecker, No Ivory Tower: McCarthyism and the Universities
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1986).
5 Outside of the academy, the Middle East Institute (MEI)
was founded in 1946 by former foreign service officers with field
experience in the region. Originally linked to the School for
Advanced International Studies (SAIS), MEI became independent
in 1948.
6 In addition to the government, major funding also came
from large philanthropic organizations like the Rockefeller, MacArthur
and Ford Foundations, the latter contributing $270 million to
34 universities for area studies and language studies between
1953-66. See Edward H. Berman, "Foundations, Philanthropy, and
Neocolonialism," in Philip G. Altbach, ed., Education and the
Colonial Experience (New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction, 1984);
Donald Fisher, Fundamental Development of the Social Sciences:
Rockefeller, Philanthropy, and the United States Social Science
Research Council (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press,
1993); Sigmund Diamond, Compromised Campus: The Collaboration
of Universities with the Intelligence Community (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1992).
7 See Lorraine McDonnell, Sue Berryman and Douglas Scott,
Federal Support for International Studies: The Role of NDEA
Title VI (Santa Monica, CA: Rand, 1981).
8 The meeting that founded MESA was attended by 51 men.
9 See Arturo Escobar, Encountering Development: The
Making and Unmaking of the Third World (Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1995); and Wolfgang Sachs, ed., The Development
Dictionary: A Guide to Knowledge as Power (London: Zed Books,
1992).
10 Daniel Lerner, The Passing of Traditional Society:
Modernizing the Middle East (New York: Free Press, 1958).
11 See Gendzier, op. cit. for a bibliography of the theory
and its critiques, as well as a useful summary of the central
criticism of modernization theory.
12 Samuel P. Huntington, Political Order in Changing
Societies (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1968).
13 In other areas, similar developments took place.
The Bulletin for Concerned Asian Scholars and North American
Congress on Latin America (NACLA) were comparable projects in
Asian and Latin American studies, respectively.
14 Some works of this period from these different strands
of left political economy include Samir Amin, especially The
Arab Nation: Nationalism and Class Struggle (London: Zed Press,
1978); the pseudonymous Mahmoud Hussein, Class Conflict in
Egypt: 1945-1970 (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1973); and
various writings in MERIP Reports, Khamsin and the
Review of Middle East Studies. Later directions taken by
work in this broad tradition, with much refinement, are reflected
in, for example, Roger Owen, The Middle East in the World Economy
1800-1914 (New York: Methuen, 1981); Huri Islamoglu-Inan,
ed., The Ottoman Empire and the World Economy (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1987); and Joel Beinin and Zachary
Lockman, Workers on the Nile: Nationalism, Communism, Islam
and the Egyptian Working Class, 1882-1954 (Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1987).
15 See Patrick Clawson, "Egypt's Industrialization: A
Critique of Dependency Theory," MERIP Reports 72 (1978)
and Fred Halliday, "Imperialism and the Middle East," with a response
by Gary Nigel Howe, "Warren's Revision of the Marxist Critique,"
MERIP Reports 117 (1983). A more recent critique of dependency
theory, and a brief discussion of this period's intellectual history,
can be found in Robert Vitalis, "The End of Third Worldism in
Egyptian Studies," Arab Studies Journal 4/1 (Spring 1996).
16 Timothy Mitchell, Colonising Egypt (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1988).
17 The South Asia Regional Studies program at the University
of Pennsylvania, for example, devoted its 1988-89 seminar series
to Orientalism, leading to the publication of Carol A.
Breckenridge and Peter van der Veer, eds., Orientalism and
the Postcolonial Predicament (Philadelphia, 1993).
18 For hostile reviews see Bernard Lewis, "The Question
of Orientalism," The New York Review of Books, June 24,
1982 and Bayly Winder's review in Middle East Journal 35
(1981), p. 617. For more measured tones see Albert Hourani, "The
Road to Morocco," New York Review of Books, March 8, 1979
and Malcolm H. Kerr's review in International Journal of Middle
East Studies 12 (1980).
19 For various perspectives on this point, see the Marxist
inspired attack on Said by Aijaz Ahmed, In Theory: Classes,
Nations, Literatures (London: Verso, 1992), and the entire
issue of Public Culture 6/1 (Fall 1993), which takes issue
with Ahmed's critique, though not through an uncritical endorsement
of Said.
20 See Hisham Sharabi, ed., Theory, Politics and the
Arab World (New York: Routledge, 1990); Tareq Y. Ismael, Middle
East Studies: International Perspectives on the State of the Art
(New York: Praeger, 1990).
21 See the discussion of Middle East social science during
this period by Lisa Anderson, "Policy-Making and Theory Building:
American Political Science and the Islamic Middle East," in Sharabi,
ibid.
22 See Lori Anne Salem, "The DANTES Survey of Courses
in Contemporary Middle East Studies," MESA Bulletin (July
1992).
23 See discussion in the issue on "Power, Mass Media
and the Middle East," Middle East Report 180 (January-February
1993).
24 Norvell B. De Atkine and Daniel Pipes, "Middle Eastern
Studies: What Went Wrong?" Academic Questions 9/1 (Winter
1995-96).
25 Some major new collections on such topics include
Iliya Harik and Denis J. Sullivan, eds., Privatization and
Liberalization in the Middle East (Bloomington: Indiana University
Press, 1992); Augustus Richard Norton, ed., Civil Society in
the Middle East 1 & 2 (Leiden, Netherlands: E. J. Brill, 1995);
and Rex Brynen, Bahgat Korany and Paul Noble, eds., Political
Liberalization and Democratization in the Arab World 1 & 2
(Boulder: Lynne Rienner, 1995).
26 Robert Bellamy, Liberalism and Modern Society
(Cambridge: Polity Press, 1992). See also, David Williams, "Liberalism
and Development Discourse," Africa 63/3 (1993).
27 A collection of important contributions to the debate
over how to reconstruct Marxist development theory can be found
in Frans J. Schuurman, ed., Beyond the Impasse: New Directions
in Development Theory (London: Zed Books, 1993).
28 See Ella Shohat, Israeli Cinema: East/West and
the Politics of Representation (Austin: University of Texas
Press, 1989); Ammiel Alcalay, After Jews and Arabs: Remaking
Levantine Culture (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press,
1993); Darius M. Rejali, Torture and Modernity: Self, Society
and State in Modern Iran (Boulder: Westview, 1994).
29 For an exception see Tim Mitchell, "America's Egypt:
Discourse of the Development Industry," Middle East Report
169 (1991).
30 A MESA survey of faculty in the US indicated that
an estimated 27 percent of the Middle East positions at private
colleges and universities and 36 percent at public institutions
would not be refilled. The most insecure disciplines for specialists
on the Middle East are economics, where an estimated 80 percent
of the current positions would not be refilled with someone who
works on the Middle East, and sociology, where the estimate is
68 percent. In anthropology, the survey revealed an estimate of
40 percent definitely not refilled, and 40 percent uncertain.
The disciplines most likely to refill Middle East positions are
history, political science, languages and literature. Cited in
Prospects for Faculty in Middle East Studies, A Report Prepared
for the National Council of Area Studies Associations, republished
by MESA, 1996.
31 See McDonnell, Berryman and Scott, Federal Support
for International Studies, op. cit., pp. vi-vii.
32 See "Update on the National Security Education Program,"
MESA Newsletter, (May 1994); and "NSEP Service Requirement
Prompts Resolution from MESA's Board of Directors," MESA Newsletter
(February 1996).
33 See Items [the Social Science Research Council newsletter],
(March 1996 and June-September 1996); Itty Abraham and Ronald
Kassimir, "Internationalization of the Social Sciences and Humanities,"
Items (June-September 1997).
34 Vicente L. Rafael, "The Cultures of Area Studies in
the United States," Social Text, Winter 1994, p. 95.
35 Khalidi, "Is There a Future for Middle East Studies?" op.
cit., p. 5.
36 See Jacob Heilbrun, "The News from Everywhere: Does
Global Thinking Threaten Local Knowledge?" Lingua Franca
(May-June 1996); and Cumings, "Boundary Displacement" op. cit.
37 See Roger Owen, "Globalization of Area Studies in
America," al-Hayat, November 18, 1996 and republished in
English by the Economic Research Forum (Cairo).
38 See Benjamin Lee, "Critical Internationalism," Public
Culture 7/3 (Spring 1995).

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