Arrested Movement in the Middle East: Mobility and Political Dissent in Arab and Palestinian Culture
By (Author) Drew Paul
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
27th November 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Decolonisation and postcolonial studies
Hardback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
How has cultural production from the Middle East responded to two simultaneous and contradictory trends: growing ease of global mobility brought about by advances in transportation and communication technologies, and increasingly odious restrictions on movement imposed by repressive regimes, civil war, and military occupations in the Arab world
This book draws on conceptions of space, borders, and mobility from fields such as cultural studies, geography, and anthropology to analyze instances in which movement is arrested, interrupted, or detoured in literature and film from Palestine, Iraq, Lebanon, and Egypt. Each chapter revolves around a particular type or space of (im)mobility, such as airports, underground tunnels, and cross-border infiltration. In many of these cases, the juxtaposition of the possibility of movement that is available to some but not others, or was once available but now is denied, acts as a catalyst for imagining forms of dissent and resistance to repression, ways to circumvent and subvert imposed immobility, and speculative visions of the future.
Drew Paul is Associate Professor of Arabic at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Texas at Austin in 2013 and he is the author of Israel/Palestine: Border Representations in Literature and Film (2020).