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Colonial Effects: The Making of National Identity in Jordan

Joseph A. Massad

Paper, 276 pages,
ISBN: 978-0-231-12323-5
$28.00 / £19.50

October, 2001
Cloth, 276 pages,
ISBN: 978-0-231-12322-8
$85.00 / £58.50


Introduction

Law, Military, and Discipline

Tradition and Modernity

Historical Moments

Part I: Codifying the Nation: Law and the Articulation of National Identity in Jordan

The Prehistory of Juridical Postcoloniality

National Time

National Space

National Territory and Paternity

Nationalizing Non-Nationals

Losing Nationality: The Law Giveth and the Law Taketh Away

Women and Children

Part II: Different Spaces as Different Times: Law and Geography in Jordanian Nationalism

Different Species of Citizens: Women and Bedouins

Bedouins and National Citizenship

Nationalist Tribalism or Tribalist Nationalism: The Debate

Jordanian Culture in an International Frame

Women Between the Public and Private Spheres

Women in Public

Women and Politics

Part III: Cultural Syncretism or Colonial Mimic Men: Jordan's Bedouins and the Military Basis of National Identity

The Bedouin Choice

Cultural Imperialism and Discipline

Cultural Cross-Dressing as Epistemology

Imperialism as Educator

Masculinity, Culture, and Women

Transforming the Bedouins

Persuasion, Education, and Surveillance

Part IV: Nationalizing the Military: Colonial Legacy as National Heritage

Anticolonial Nationalism and the Army

King Husayn and the Nationalist Officers

Clash of the Titans: Glubb Pasha and the Uneasy King

"Arabizing" the Jordanian Army

The Palace Coup and the End of an Era

Palace Repression and the Forgiving King

Palestinians and the Military

Threatening the Nation's Masculinity and Religious "Tradition"

The Military and the New Jordan

Colonial or National Legacy

Part V: The Nation as an Elastic Entity: The Expansion and Contraction of Jordan

Expanding the Nation: The Road to Annexation

The Jericho Conference

The New Jordan

Palestinians and the West Bank

Competing Representatives: The PLO and Jordan

Toward Civil War

A New Nationalist Era

Clothes, Accents, and Football: Asserting Post—Civil War Jordanianness

Contracting the Nation: The Road to "The Severing of Ties"

Who Is Jordanian?

Concluding Remarks

Related Subjects


About the Author

Joseph A. Massad is assistant professor of modern Arab politics and intellectual history in the Department of Middle East and Asian Languages and Cultures at Columbia University. He won the Malcolm Kerr Dissertation Award for this work from the Middle East Studies Association.

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