{"id":628,"date":"2013-04-28T11:58:11","date_gmt":"2013-04-28T08:58:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/achrs.org\/english\/2013\/04\/28\/by-jadaliyya-thinking-citizenship-in-a-revolutionary-arab-world-the-intransigence-of-difference\/"},"modified":"2023-03-21T15:34:53","modified_gmt":"2023-03-21T12:34:53","slug":"by-jadaliyya-thinking-citizenship-in-a-revolutionary-arab-world-the-intransigence-of-difference","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/achrs.org\/english\/2013\/04\/28\/by-jadaliyya-thinking-citizenship-in-a-revolutionary-arab-world-the-intransigence-of-difference\/","title":{"rendered":"By Jadaliyya: &#8216;Thinking Citizenship in a Revolutionary Arab World: The Intransigence of Difference&#8217;"},"content":{"rendered":"<\/p>\n<p><strong><span style=\"font-size: 10pt; font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif;\"><span style=\"color: #555555; line-height: 16.796875px;\"><\/span><\/span><\/strong><strong style=\"font-size: 11px;\"><span style=\"font-size: 10pt; font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif;\"><span style=\"color: #555555; line-height: 16.796875px;\">Written by Maya Mikdashi<\/span><\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-size: 8pt;\"><em><span style=\"font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif;\"><span style=\"color: #555555; line-height: 16.796875px;\">April 26, 2013&nbsp;<\/span><\/span><\/em><\/span><\/p>\n<div>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 16px; padding: 0px; color: #555555; text-align: justify; font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; line-height: 16.796875px;\"><span style=\"font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif;\">The ongoing Arab uprisings that began in Tunisia in late 2010 have demonstrated that citizenship in the Arab Middle East is a subject in need of much critical scholarship and intervention. Many scholars, working from an archive of political philosophy that begins with Rousseau&#8217;s social contract, have assessed the Arab national project of producing citizens skeptically, as Suad Joseph has demonstrated. Moreover, there is tendency in political theory to view members of authoritarian, corporatist, and brutal states as \u201csubjects\u201d rather than \u201ccitizens.\u201d As Lisa Wedeen, Mahmoud Mamdani, Rogers Brubacker, and others have argued, in such studies, citizenship appears as a universal category that fosters an ideologically inflected and ideologically&nbsp;<i style=\"margin: 0px; padding: 0px;\">narrated<\/i>&nbsp;subjectivity. The Arab uprisings, in which men and women of all ages and from all classes bravely challenged brutal authoritarian regimes across the region and called for the&nbsp;<i style=\"margin: 0px; padding: 0px;\">dignity&nbsp;<\/i>of the citizen to be protected, compel us to think critically of the supposed successes and failures of nationalism and citizenship in the region.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 16px; padding: 0px; color: #555555; text-align: justify; font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; line-height: 16.796875px;\"><span style=\"font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif;\">A focus on citizenship brings the law into view as a technology that makes certain practices of the citizen legible and others unintelligible.&nbsp; Crucially, the citizen can only emerge as a legal and embodied subject position if its negation, the non-citizen, is present. This insight is particularly important to the field of Middle East Studies, where the refugee and increasingly, the migrant laborer, are crucial areas of research. It is also particularly important in Arab states such as Lebanon, where the making and unmaking of refugees by the state is a process conditioned by central tenets and anxieties of Lebanese nationalism. The modern state produces, quantifies, and regulates particular groups of residents and citizens, as well as individual citizens, with individuating and totalizing identifiers: region, gender, name, sect, sex, religion, age, caste, race, refugee, and finally, citizenship.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 16px; padding: 0px; color: #555555; text-align: justify; font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; line-height: 16.796875px;\"><span style=\"font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif;\">The study of &nbsp;citizenship as a set of formalized and institutionalized practices also inevitably leads to the study of bureaucracy. As scholars such as Carole Patemen and Frances Hasso have argued, it is upon these evidentiary terrains that citizenship and gender reveal themselves to be mutually constitutive. The citizen\u2014whether male or female\u2014is always gendered, always sexed, and always predicated on the presence of several others. Jacqueline Stevens has insisted that, because political society is constituted through state regulated kinship, one must study gender, sex, and their embodiments and regulations in order to approach the state and its citizens. She writes that \u201cto see the artifice of the family (and its appearance as natural) is to see the artifice of political society (and its appearance as a nation).\u201d Crucially, interrogating citizenship and insisting on its very markedness allows us to study difference without assigning normative value.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 16px; padding: 0px; color: #555555; text-align: justify; font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; line-height: 16.796875px;\"><span style=\"font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif;\">In practice citizenship is an assemblage that is contingent, tense, and often articulated through contradiction. One&#8217;s gender privilege and class status, for example, often interrupt each other. In Lebanon, a citizen&#8217;s sect, class and gender together structure and contingently frame&nbsp;<i style=\"margin: 0px; padding: 0px;\">each<\/i>&nbsp;practice of&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.jadaliyya.com\/pages\/index\/376\/a-legal-guide-to-being-a-lebanese-woman-(part-1)\" style=\"margin: 0px; padding: 0px; color: #700000; outline-style: none;\">citizenship<\/a>. By destabilizing these supposedly black-boxed categories of sect, class, and gender, we demonstrate Ann Stoler\u2019s important lesson\u2014that categories of identification and recognition are inextricable from the production and regulation of gendered and sexual regimes. Furthermore, by interrogating the assumed coherence of the universal abstraction of \u201cthe citizen,\u201d we insist that particularities, often in tension with one another, mark every practice of citizenship.&nbsp;&nbsp; In addition to its very markedness and its constitution through the state&#8217;s regulation of kinship, citizenship is primarily a legal relationship to others. You are a citizen because you are the son or daughter of x. You are a citizen because you are the wife or husband of x. You are a citizen because this other person is a refugee, and he is a refugee because you are a citizen\u2014a re-articulation that may push us towards a different ethic of activism regarding refugees across the region. The contingency and relatedness that constitute all citizenship practices disrupts the idea of the autonomous, abstract, universal citizen.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 16px; padding: 0px; color: #555555; text-align: justify; font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; line-height: 16.796875px;\"><span style=\"font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif;\">To say that all citizenship is marked is not to deny that power relations and regimes of privilege exist. As Michael Warner has taught us, within a marked category such as \u201cgay,\u201d power regimes persist and reproduce themselves. Similarly, while all citizens are marked in that all citizens are a project, at a distance from the normative ideal\u2014some markings are more pronounced than others. Thus while all citizens are gendered, as Carole Pateman argues, the female citizen is defined by her gendered difference, and heterosexual male citizenship is normalized as the universal. The intractability of citizenship and gender will come as no surprise to most students of the Middle East as the laws that produce the category of the \u201ccitizen\u201d are often the same laws that produce gendered differentiation between \u201cmale\u201d and \u201cfemale\u201d citizens.&nbsp; One may ask if it is even possible to write to about \u201ccitizenship in Saudi Arabia\u201d or indeed, politics in that state, without integrating a gendered analytic into your framework.&nbsp; While Madawi Al-Rasheed has recently&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.jadaliyya.com\/pages\/index\/9722\/new-texts-out-now_madawi-al-rasheed-a-most-masculi\" style=\"margin: 0px; padding: 0px; color: #700000; outline-style: none;\">urged<\/a>&nbsp;us all to do so, one wonders if she would have&nbsp;<i style=\"margin: 0px; padding: 0px;\">had to<\/i>&nbsp;if legal discriminations in the Kingdom were articulated along racial lines (darker skinned Saudis cannot drive but lighter skinned Saudis can, darker skinned Saudis cannot travel without the express permission of lighter skinned Saudis).<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 16px; padding: 0px; color: #555555; text-align: justify; font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; line-height: 16.796875px;\"><span style=\"font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif;\">It is an exciting time to be thinking and writing about citizenship during a time that Mouin Rabbani has characterized as&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.jadaliyya.com\/pages\/index\/1722\/the-year-of-the-citizen\" style=\"margin: 0px; padding: 0px; color: #700000; outline-style: none;\">\u201cthe year of the citizen.\u201d<\/a>&nbsp;Refracted through the tensions that a theorization of difference allows, this statement becomes pluralized: the year(s) of the citizen(s).&nbsp;Female citizens. Male citizens. Rich citizens. Poor citizens. Egyptian Citizens. Syrian citizens. Shiite Citizens. Non-citizens. And countless combinations of markedness.&nbsp;Never \u201cthe citizen.\u201d Instead, always the project to make and remake them.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 16px; padding: 0px; color: #555555; text-align: justify; font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; line-height: 16.796875px;\"><span style=\"font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif;\"><em style=\"margin: 0px; padding: 0px;\">[<\/em><i style=\"margin: 0px; padding: 0px;\">A more developed version of this article appears in the current issue of the International Journal of Middle East Studies (IJMES) as part of a roundtable edited by Paul Amar and Omnia El Shakry on Queer Theory and Middle East Studies. The roundtable can be accessed&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/journals.cambridge.org\/action\/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&amp;aid=8904641&amp;fulltextType=DS&amp;fileId=S0020743813000068\" style=\"margin: 0px; padding: 0px; color: #700000; outline-style: none;\">here<\/a>.]<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 16px; padding: 0px; color: #555555; font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; line-height: 16.796875px; text-align: left;\"><em><span style=\"font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif;\">Source:&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.jadaliyya.com\/pages\/index\/11402\/thinking-citizenship-in-a-revolutionary-arab-world\">http:\/\/www.jadaliyya.com\/pages\/index\/11402\/thinking-citizenship-in-a-revolutionary-arab-world<\/a>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;<\/span><\/em><em style=\"font-size: 12px; line-height: 16.796875px;\"><span>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;<\/span><span style=\"font-size: 12px; line-height: 16.796875px;\">Illustration: The perfect Arab citizen&#8217; by Khalid Albaih<\/span><\/em><\/p>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 16px; padding: 0px; color: #555555; font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; line-height: 16.796875px; text-align: left;\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<\/p><\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Written by Maya Mikdashi April 26, 2013&nbsp; The ongoing Arab uprisings that began in Tunisia in late 2010 have demonstrated that citizenship in the Arab Middle East is a subject in need of much critical scholarship and intervention. Many scholars, working from an archive of political philosophy that begins with Rousseau&#8217;s social contract, have assessed &hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[18,1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-628","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-research-2","category-statements"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.5 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>By Jadaliyya: &#039;Thinking Citizenship in a Revolutionary Arab World: The Intransigence of Difference&#039; - Amman Center for Human Rights Studies<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/achrs.org\/english\/2013\/04\/28\/by-jadaliyya-thinking-citizenship-in-a-revolutionary-arab-world-the-intransigence-of-difference\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"By Jadaliyya: &#039;Thinking Citizenship in a Revolutionary Arab World: The Intransigence of Difference&#039; - Amman Center for Human Rights Studies\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Written by Maya Mikdashi April 26, 2013&nbsp; The ongoing Arab uprisings that began in Tunisia in late 2010 have demonstrated that citizenship in the Arab Middle East is a subject in need of much critical scholarship and intervention. 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