Rerouting the Persian Gulf

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Rerouting the Persian Gulf REROUTING THE PERSIAN GULF: THE TRANSNATIONALIZATION OF IRANIAN MIGRANT NETWORKS, c.1900-1940 Lindsey R. Stephenson A DISSERTATION PRESENTED TO THE FACULTY OF PRINCETON UNIVERSITY IN CANDIDACY FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY RECOMMENDED FOR ACCEPTANCE BY THE DEPARTMENT OF NEAR EASTERN STUDIES Adviser: Cyrus Schayegh June 2018 © Copyright by Lindsey R. Stephenson, 2018. All rights reserved. Abstract This dissertation is a transnational social history of the transformation of relationships and identities around the Persian Gulf between 1900-1940. It approaches this history through the lens of Iranian migrants and their networks from southern Iran to Kuwait and Bahrain. By following these migrants, this study encounters and explores particular political, economic and social forces that impacted their movement and ultimately altered the way in which the littoral was connected. Although the Gulf was previously characterized by overlapping sovereignty of imperial, regional and local actors, in the early twentieth century the people who constantly moved back and forth across the water became a battleground of belonging. Emerging states explicitly directed new conceptions of territory, sovereignty, jurisdiction and belonging towards this borderland region of the Ottoman, Persian and British Empires. As much as political forces sought to regulate movement and identities by invoking legal boundaries between the eastern and western shores of the Gulf, they contended with forces undeterred by such structures; namely the global capital that pulled people to the western side and local actors who already knew the way. Iranians invented new strategies for navigating the rules and regulations of states. Rerouting their networks to smaller ports allowed for a slow and steady flow of goods and people to the opposite shores. In no small way Iranian migrants on the western shores of the Gulf shaped the rapidly changing world around them. From language to food to technology and the built environment, the numerous and varied connections between either side of the Gulf that was kept alive by Iranian migrants in fact wove the shores closer together socially and culturally even as politically the region was being broken apart. This study shows how movement within a single Persian Gulf arena came to be transnational; how traversing the water came to mean moving from one kind of space to another. It argues that although Iranians had been crossing the Gulf for centuries, the meaning of this movement changed in the early twentieth century, as did the scale. iv Table of Contents List of Illustrations ............................................................................................................................ viii A Note on Transliteration and Conventions ...................................................................................... ix Acknowledgements ............................................................................................................................... x Introduction ........................................................................................................................................... 1 Clusters, Circuits and the Western Indian Ocean .........................................................................11 Foreignness and migration .............................................................................................................14 The end of overlapping sovereignty ..............................................................................................18 Territorialization and protection ....................................................................................................22 Nationalizing populations ..............................................................................................................29 The Global Economy and Changes in Scale .................................................................................33 Transformed meaning of migration ...............................................................................................39 Dissertation Scheme .......................................................................................................................43 Chapter 1 - Crossing the Gulf: Networks and Migration from Southern Iran to Kuwait and Bahrain, 1900-1940 ............................................................................................................................45 Introduction .....................................................................................................................................45 Historically Shifting Cities and People .........................................................................................47 Political Geography and Disconnect in Southern Iran .................................................................51 Webs of Interaction ........................................................................................................................55 Geographical considerations ..........................................................................................................58 v Web #1: Bandar Lingeh .................................................................................................................60 Web #2: Bushehr ............................................................................................................................62 Web #3: Mohammerah ...................................................................................................................66 Twentieth century changes .............................................................................................................67 The encroaching central state .........................................................................................................69 Conclusion.......................................................................................................................................77 Chapter 2 - Traveling, Territorialization and the Iranians in Between ............................................79 Local rule on the littoral .................................................................................................................80 The British move in ........................................................................................................................85 A new “foreign” ..............................................................................................................................87 Traveling papers .............................................................................................................................93 Testing the waters ........................................................................................................................ 103 Tradition as a loophole ................................................................................................................ 106 Conclusion.................................................................................................................................... 113 Chapter 3 - Nationalizing the Periphery ......................................................................................... 115 Building an Iranian nation ........................................................................................................... 118 Legal status and the nationalizing process ................................................................................. 124 Enforcing rights and obligations in the periphery: Bahrainis in Iran ....................................... 129 Iran Nationality Law .................................................................................................................... 131 Collateral damage ........................................................................................................................ 134 vi Retaliation in Bahrain .................................................................................................................. 137 Conclusion.................................................................................................................................... 144 Chapter 4 - Building a New Homeland .......................................................................................... 145 Introduction .................................................................................................................................. 145 New trades of the 20th century .................................................................................................... 147 Expanding old networks .............................................................................................................. 151 Carrying the burdens of global capitalism ................................................................................. 157 British Patronage ......................................................................................................................... 163 Transforming the port towns ....................................................................................................... 170 Shaping the Built Environment ................................................................................................... 175 Conclusion.................................................................................................................................... 179 Conclusion .......................................................................................................................................
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