By Syed Hamad Ali

Andrew Arsan is a historian at Cambridge University specialising in
modern Middle East and French and British imperialism. His book,
“Interlopers of Empire: The Lebanese Diaspora in Colonial French West
Africa”, won last year’s Gladstone Prize, an annual award from the Royal
Historical Society for the best first book in non-British history.
“We
tend to think about the Middle East only in terms of the flow of
refugees,” Arsan tells Weekend Review as we sit in his office at St
John’s College, Cambridge. “People who are forced out by war, by
dislocation, by conflict. Yes, there is clearly a truth to that,
especially at the moment. But we tend to forget the ways in which Middle
Eastern people moved about freely, for economic reasons — as economic
migrants, as labour migrants … in the late 19th, early 20th century,
people who were moving across the Indian Ocean, and also people who
moved out to the US, South America, West Africa. So I was interested, in
a sense, in not treating the Middle East as an exception, as very
different to other parts of the world, but trying to think about it as a
region, like other regions, which fits into a general pattern of global
history in the 19th and 20th centuries.”




Changiz M. Varzi





