The Mashriq Unbound: Arab Modernism, Criollo Nationalism, and the Discovery of America by the Turks

This paper explores ideologies of difference and mobility constructed in the circulation of Middle Eastern people and texts by framing these migrations through imperial and nationalist narratives produced in the Middle East and Mexico. The aesthetic and civilizational classifications defended by int...

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Main Author: Camila Pastor de Maria Campos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: North Carolina State University, Moise A. Khayrallah Center for Lebanese Diaspora Studies 2015-01-01
Series:Mashriq & Mahjar
Subjects:
Online Access:https://lebanesestudies.ojs.chass.ncsu.edu/index.php/mashriq/article/view/39
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spelling doaj-04ccbdcd156f4f1cbf14f96cd7012e412020-11-25T04:03:59ZengNorth Carolina State University, Moise A. Khayrallah Center for Lebanese Diaspora StudiesMashriq & Mahjar2169-44352015-01-012210.24847/22i2014.39The Mashriq Unbound: Arab Modernism, Criollo Nationalism, and the Discovery of America by the TurksCamila Pastor de Maria CamposThis paper explores ideologies of difference and mobility constructed in the circulation of Middle Eastern people and texts by framing these migrations through imperial and nationalist narratives produced in the Middle East and Mexico. The aesthetic and civilizational classifications defended by intellectuals of the Mexican Mahjar debating the Mexican intelligentsia in migrant and national press which situate Mashriqi peoples as fearless explorers and rightful ‘conquerors’ of less beautiful, less modern Middle American natives have a genealogy in Ottoman representations of New World populations. Cultivated during the nahda, the Arab modernist ‘awakening,’ these hierarchizing claims were concerned, like other anticolonial nationalisms, with situating Arabs as both heirs to a glorious ancient civilization and cosmopolitan moderns. Nahda narratives, an Arab decolonizing discourse, had emancipatory as well as subordinating effects as they intersected with Criollo nationalism. Mobilizing the universalist hierarchies integral to global modernism, the discursive decolonization of an ‘Arab civilization’ afforded the subalternization of Middle American populations. It enabled Mashriqi and Middle American elites to bisect Middle American nations into ‘primitive’ Indians and civilized Criollos, so that Mahjar notables and Criollo elites could come to understand themselves as partners in a civilizing mission.  https://lebanesestudies.ojs.chass.ncsu.edu/index.php/mashriq/article/view/39mobilitycirculationMiddle EasternimperialMexicoMexican Mahjar
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Camila Pastor de Maria Campos
spellingShingle Camila Pastor de Maria Campos
The Mashriq Unbound: Arab Modernism, Criollo Nationalism, and the Discovery of America by the Turks
Mashriq & Mahjar
mobility
circulation
Middle Eastern
imperial
Mexico
Mexican Mahjar
author_facet Camila Pastor de Maria Campos
author_sort Camila Pastor de Maria Campos
title The Mashriq Unbound: Arab Modernism, Criollo Nationalism, and the Discovery of America by the Turks
title_short The Mashriq Unbound: Arab Modernism, Criollo Nationalism, and the Discovery of America by the Turks
title_full The Mashriq Unbound: Arab Modernism, Criollo Nationalism, and the Discovery of America by the Turks
title_fullStr The Mashriq Unbound: Arab Modernism, Criollo Nationalism, and the Discovery of America by the Turks
title_full_unstemmed The Mashriq Unbound: Arab Modernism, Criollo Nationalism, and the Discovery of America by the Turks
title_sort mashriq unbound: arab modernism, criollo nationalism, and the discovery of america by the turks
publisher North Carolina State University, Moise A. Khayrallah Center for Lebanese Diaspora Studies
series Mashriq & Mahjar
issn 2169-4435
publishDate 2015-01-01
description This paper explores ideologies of difference and mobility constructed in the circulation of Middle Eastern people and texts by framing these migrations through imperial and nationalist narratives produced in the Middle East and Mexico. The aesthetic and civilizational classifications defended by intellectuals of the Mexican Mahjar debating the Mexican intelligentsia in migrant and national press which situate Mashriqi peoples as fearless explorers and rightful ‘conquerors’ of less beautiful, less modern Middle American natives have a genealogy in Ottoman representations of New World populations. Cultivated during the nahda, the Arab modernist ‘awakening,’ these hierarchizing claims were concerned, like other anticolonial nationalisms, with situating Arabs as both heirs to a glorious ancient civilization and cosmopolitan moderns. Nahda narratives, an Arab decolonizing discourse, had emancipatory as well as subordinating effects as they intersected with Criollo nationalism. Mobilizing the universalist hierarchies integral to global modernism, the discursive decolonization of an ‘Arab civilization’ afforded the subalternization of Middle American populations. It enabled Mashriqi and Middle American elites to bisect Middle American nations into ‘primitive’ Indians and civilized Criollos, so that Mahjar notables and Criollo elites could come to understand themselves as partners in a civilizing mission.  
topic mobility
circulation
Middle Eastern
imperial
Mexico
Mexican Mahjar
url https://lebanesestudies.ojs.chass.ncsu.edu/index.php/mashriq/article/view/39
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