
Since 2011 Over 5.6 Million Syrians Have Fled To Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, And Beyond, And Another 6.6 Million Are Internally Displaced. The Contemporary Flight Of Syrian Refugees Comes One Century After The Region's Formative Experience With Massive Upheaval, Displacement, And Geopolitical Intervention: The First World War. In This Book, Stacy Fahrenthold Examines The Politics Of Syrian And Lebanese Migration Around The Period Of The First World War. Some Half Million Arab Migrants, Nearly All Still Subjects Of The Ottoman Empire, Lived In A Diaspora Concentrated In Brazil, Argentina, And The United States. They Faced New Demands For Their Political Loyalty From Istanbul, Which Commanded Them To Resist European Colonialism. From The Western Hemisphere, Syrian Migrants Grappled With Political Suspicion, Travel Restriction, And Outward Displays Of Support For The War Against The Ottomans. From These Diasporic Communities, Syrians Used Their Ethnic Associations, Commercial Networks, And Global Press To Oppose Ottoman Rule, Collaborating With The Entente Powers Because They Believed This War Work Would Bolster The Cause Of Syria's Liberation. Between The Ottomans And The Entente Shows How These Communities In North And South America Became A Geopolitical Frontier Between The Young Turk Revolution And The Early French Mandate. It Examines How Empires At War-from The Ottomans To The French-embraced And Claimed Syrian Migrants As Part Of The State-building Process In The Middle East. In Doing So, They Transformed This Diaspora Into An Epicenter For Arab Nationalist Politics. Drawing On Transnational Sources From Migrant Activists, This Wide-ranging Work Reveals The Degree To Which Ottoman Migrants Became Syrians While Abroad And Brought Their Politics Home To The Post-ottoman Middle East.
This work investigates how the Syrian and Lebanese diaspora in the Americas functioned as a critical geopolitical frontier during the First World War, shaping the transition from Ottoman rule to the French Mandate. Stacy D. Fahrenthold, an expert in Middle Eastern migration history, utilizes a vast array of transnational sources—including migrant activist records, commercial networks, and global press archives—to argue that these migrant communities were not merely passive observers but active participants in the formation of Arab nationalist politics. By analyzing the competing pressures from the Ottoman Empire and the Entente powers, the author demonstrates how the diaspora became a central site for state-building and identity formation that eventually influenced the post-Ottoman Middle East.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of migration and Middle Eastern history recognize this text as a significant contribution to understanding the transnational nature of Arab nationalism. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the depth of the archival research, which provides a nuanced view of how global conflicts are shaped by diasporic communities.
Page Count:
304
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190872144
ISBN-13:
9780190872144
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