The University of Washington Press is pleased to announce the publication of Tribes and Empire on the Margins of Nineteenth-Century Iran Arash Khazeni AVAILABLE NOW"This
book is the most detailed and vivid account of tribes in
nineteenth-century Iran yet to be written and sheds new light on Iranian
social and cultural history." -Afshin Marashi, California State
University at Sacramento "Arash Khazeni's book fills an important
gap in our understanding of tribes and center-periphery relations in
the Qajar period, placing the Bakhtiyari tribes' involvement in the
Constitutional Revolution within the context of broader trends in
Bakhtiyari politics and history." - Kamran Scot Aghaie, University of
Texas at Austin Tribes and Empire on the Margins of Nineteenth-Century Iran traces the
history of the Bakhtiyari tribal confederacy of the Zagros Mountains
through momentous times that saw the opening of their territory to the
outside world. As the Qajar dynasty sought to integrate the peoples on
its margins into the state, the British Empire made commercial inroads
into the once inaccessible mountains on the frontier between Iran and
Iraq. The distance between the state and the tribes was narrowed through
imperial projects that included the building of a road through the
mountains, the gathering of geographical and ethnographic information,
and the exploration for oil, which culminated during the Iranian
Constitutional Revolution.
These modern projects assimilated
autonomous pastoral nomadic tribes on the peripheries of Qajar Iran into
a wider imperial territory and the world economy. Tribal subjects did
not remain passive amidst these changes in environment and society,
however, and projects of empire in the hinterlands of Iran were always
mediated through encounters, accommodation, and engagement with the
tribes. In contrast to the range of literature on the urban classes and
political center in Qajar Iran, Arash Khazeni adopts a view from the
Bakhtiyari tents on the periphery. Drawing upon Persian chronicles,
tribal histories, and archival sources from London, Tehran, and Isfahan,
this book opens new ground by approaching nineteenth-century Iran from
its edge and placing the tribal periphery at the heart of a tale about
empire and assimilation in the modern Middle East.
Arash Khazeni
teaches history at the Claremont Colleges in California and is currently
Robert W. Mellon Research Fellow at the Huntington Library.
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