Book Talk with Jonathan Wyrtzen: Worldmaking in the Long Great War

11 Oct 2022

pittadmin

Announced by the University of Pittsburgh:

His second book project, Worldmaking in the Long Great War: How Local and Colonial Struggles Shaped the Modern Middle East (forthcoming with Columbia University Press, 2022), reexamines how the First World War unmade the greater Ottoman political order that had shaped the Middle East for centuries and opened up the possibility for local and European actors to reimagine political identities and political futures within the region. Running against the standard narrative of European colonial powers imposing artificial boundaries at the Paris Peace Conference, this reexamination of the formative moment in the Middle East’s modern history presents a much more complicated and violent story. The book shifts the frame of the Great War in two important ways: expanding the geographic scope to stretch from Morocco to Iran and the temporal scope to extend into the 1930s. It demonstrates that, instead of an imperial drawing room, it was in and through violent clashes on the ground among competing local and colonial projects during the latter phases of the Long Great War in the 1920s-30s that the Middle East’s states, boundaries, and identities were remade.

Event Date: 
Tuesday, October 11, 2022 - 1:00pm to 2:30pm
Institution(s): 
Sponsored By: 
Georgetown University’s Center for Contemporary Arab Studies and Institute for Global History
Location: 
Virtual, ICC 662