Description
Book SynopsisThe Arab Spring uprisings have been described as a simple expression of mass protest against authoritarian regimes. Adam Hanieh claims that this is more than a cry for democracy. He shows how an analysis of capitalist development in the Middle East is key to understanding these revolutions. This is not quite the first analyses of the Arab Spring; however, it goes in-depth to examine the political economy of the Middle East. Hanieh's research and findings as presented in Lineages of Revolt will be essential to attaining peace in the Middle East.
Trade ReviewMore than three years after the beginning of the uprisings in the Arab world, one is scarcely able to find a commentator with anything good to say about themleast of all one on the Left
Adam Hanieh’s Lineages of Revolt is a bracing corrective to this sort of thinking and deserves its place on the bookshelves and reading lists of students of the region and activists alike. Both meatily empirical and sharply theoretical, Hanieh’s book dispatches several of the clichés that inform the study of the political economy of the Arab world
Lineages of Revolt is, in short, a masterful achievement.” Jaime Allinson, WorkingUSA Praise for Capitalism and Class in the Gulf Arab States This important, original work should be read by anyone with an interest in the political economy of the Middle East.” Middle East Research and Information Project (MERIP). "Hanieh's groundbreaking book argues that we should not view the Gulf Arab states as anomalies in the worldwide economy.'" Arab Studies Journal "Insightful, timely, and welcome...the analytical framework and substantial data he puts forward in the book will help readers map out the current and future processes of regional integration, class formations, and contradictions, and to situate these processes within the wider global political economy." International Socialist Review
“More than three years after the beginning of the uprisings in the Arab world, one is scarcely able to find a commentator with anything good to say about them—least of all one on the Left … Adam Hanieh’s Lineages of Revolt is a bracing corrective to this sort of thinking and deserves its place on the bookshelves and reading lists of students of the region and activists alike. Both meatily empirical and sharply theoretical, Hanieh’s book dispatches several of the clichés that inform the study of the political economy of the Arab world … Lineages of Revolt is, in short, a masterful achievement.” —Jaime Allinson, WorkingUSA Praise for Capitalism and Class in the Gulf Arab States “This important, original work should be read by anyone with an interest in the political economy of the Middle East.” —Middle East Research and Information Project (MERIP). "Hanieh's groundbreaking book argues that we should not view the Gulf Arab states as anomalies in the worldwide economy.'" —Arab Studies Journal "Insightful, timely, and welcome...the analytical framework and substantial data he puts forward in the book will help readers map out the current and future processes of regional integration, class formations, and contradictions, and to situate these processes within the wider global political economy." —International Socialist Review
Table of ContentsTable of Contents for Lineages of Revolt: Issues of Contemporary Capitalism in the Middle East 1. Introduction (framing and methodology; introduction to major themes - capitalism, imperialism, internationalization; book layout) 2. Framing the Region: Imperialism and the Middle East (ATTACHED) 3. Mapping the Neoliberal Experience (ATTACHED) 4. Land, Class and Neoliberal Change in North Africa (ATTACHED) 5. Class and State in the West Bank: Neoliberalism Under Occupation (ATTACHED) 6. Class, State and Region: Bringing the Gulf Arab States Back In (ATTACHED) 7. Crisis, Revolution and Counter-Revolution (bringing together the arguments of the book in framing the current revolts; looking at the impact of global economic crisis, assessing nature of counterrevolution; discussion of way forward, issues for Left and solidarity movements) Appendices