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Sinews of War and Trade
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How shipping is central to the very fabric of global capitalism.

About the Author

Laleh Khalili is a Professor of International Politics at Queen Mary University of London. She is the author of Heroes and Martyrs of Palestine: The Politics of National Commemoration and Time in the Shadows: Confinement in Counterinsurgencies.

Reviews

Praise for Time in the Shadows:

[A] groundbreaking new book.
*Financial Times*

Praise for Time in the Shadows:

Laleh Khalili's Time in the Shadows is the ghostly other of The U.S. Army/Marine Corps Counterinsurgency Field Manual. Deft and informative, the book provides a historical excavation of the imperatives of counter-insurgency doctrines-from the ideas that drove the European colonial wars in the dying days of those empires to the U.S. and Israeli states of warfare in our own times. A serious book that should be required reading.
*Vijay Prashad, Trinity College, author of The Darker Nations: A People's History of the Third World*

Praise for Heroes and Martyrs of Palestine:

Khalili is to be congratulated for her perception that commemorative practices would offer an illuminating path to reworking a history that combines tragedy and resistance in unusual measure. The skill with which she brings together wide-ranging archival research and live-in observation has produced an outstanding study that balances cool analysis with lively sympathy.
*Middle East Report*

Praise for Heroes and Martyrs of Palestine:

This eloquent, engaging, well-researched book ... is an essential volume in any collection on Palestinian politics and society.
*International Journal of Middle East Studies*

If the maritime industry represents the circulatory system of the modern global economy, then Laleh Khalili has offered us a uniquely insightful forensic assessment of how this capillary system took shape through history and the central role played by ports on the Arabian Peninsula. Her book, Sinews of War and Trade, makes clear that these ports have been far more than just tacit intersections of international trade. They have played and continue to play a vital role in framing racial labour hierarchies, accumulating capital in specific hands, and reinforcing colonial regimes of profit, law and administration. Both lucid and nuanced, the book offers a masterful study in the ways that violence and security as well as licit and illicit trade, get negotiated in and by these ports. This is one of those rare pieces of academic research that is at once readable and accessible for the lay public while also making a genuine contribution to the relevant historical scholarship.
*Ian Urbina, Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and the author of Outlaw Ocean*

Laleh Khalili's fascinating new book opens the window on another world, hidden in plain sight, a shadow world of ports and container ships that holds a key to the often violent workings of contemporary capitalism. To read Sinews of War and Trade is to understand the truth of Derek Walcott's observation that "the sea is history."
*Adam Shatz*

In this long awaited book Laleh Khalili makes brilliant contributions to every subject she touches: maritime history, labor history, military history, and the history of global capitalism. Readers will delight in the book's originality -- there is truly nothing else like it.
*Marcus Rediker, author of The Slave Ship: A Human History*

Laleh Khalili is our Ismael, taking us on a fascinating journey under the surface of war and trade, into its world of infrastructure, the chains that bind humanity because of capitalism's maddening search for the white whale of endless profit. Centred on the Arabian Peninsula, the story of big ships and bigger egos resonates across the oceans from port to port, an oily residue marking the ugliness of our times.
*Vijay Prashad, Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research*

If the maritime industry represents the circulatory system of the modern global economy, then Laleh Khalili has offered us a uniquely insightful forensic assessment of how this capillary system took shape through history and the central role played by ports on the Arabian Peninsula. Her book, Sinews of War and Trade, makes clear that these ports have been far more than just tacit intersections of international trade. They have played and continue to play a vital role in framing racial labour hierarchies, accumulating capital in specific hands, and reinforcing colonial regimes of profit, law and administration. Both lucid and nuanced, the book offers a masterful study in the ways that violence and security as well as licit and illicit trade, get negotiated in and by these ports. This is one of those rare pieces of academic research that is at once readable and accessible for the lay public while also making a genuine contribution to the relevant historical scholarship.
*Ian Urbina is a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and the author of The Outlaw Ocean*

[Laleh Khalili] gives a nuanced account of many seas and lands. Written with meticulous attention to historical details, Khalili maps global capitalist trends that drew the shores of the Arabian Peninsula into global markets, bringing commodities, labour, pilgrims and adventurers to mark the history of a region that only began to attract attention with the discovery of oil. This book takes us back to old maritime trade, ports and people who shaped the history of the region. Much of this history is still very relevant
to the present.
*Professor Madawi Al-Rasheed*

In this extraordinary work, Laleh Khalili takes us on an epic journey that is at once painfully timely and powerfully timeless. Centering this story of imperial trade and war on the Arabian Peninsula, Khalili illuminates how the very making of land and legal categories, the transformation of borders, the political and economic rights of workers, and entire planetary ecologies are remade through the ruthless impetus to move cargo and commodities overseas. The scale of this book is breathtaking but the story is intimate and expertly crafted, moving from entire coast lines to city streets and singular bodily movements. This is a poetry of place that exposes the power and violence of circulatory infrastructures of war and trade, while always insisting that another maritime world is possible.
*Deborah Cowen*

Vividly evocative...rich in detail, [Khalili brings] the subject matter to life with powerful immediacy.
*Tribune*

Analysis of how international systems actually work, like Laleh Khalili's study of maritime trade, uncovers a different world. The comforting phrases of international affairs in the face of policed seas, oligopolistic firms in strategic alliances with national governments, military-backed colonial dependencies and surveillance hegemony are mere fantasies distracting us from the realities of power and capital.
*Times Literary Supplement*

Little has been written about the sea trade in the Gulf. Laleh Khalili's latest book explores the complex realities that drive this massive economy.
*openDemocracy*

Powerful and unconstrained conceptual and poetic tools establish the shorelines of Khalili's sea, then, and it is here that global capitalism takes its tightly woven place...Sinews is a stimulating read and a surefooted introduction to the subject, with deep pockets of research.
*Third Text*

Detailed and enjoyable
*International Socialism*

A book that is both enlightening and incisive in its critical commentary of shipping and capitalism in the Arabian Peninsula
*Socialist Review*

As Laleh Khalili shows in her meticulously researched book, the amphibious histories of trade, resources, and labour are inseparable from the power plays of imperialism and war.
*Jadaliyya*

Sinews offers one of the most outstanding recent investigations into the hard-to-narrate infrastructure of modern ports and their place in the patterns of global conflict and commerce. Khalili's deft and forensic investigation brings into focus how the region was shaped and in turn shaped the global energy economy in the age of oil. Moreover, she draws a bright line between regional military and trade networks, revealing the human cost of ordinary logistics.
*Baffler*

Remarkable ... an impressively original, scholarly work.
*Inside Arabia*

A richly revealing portrait of a complex industry that mingles both astonishingly archaic practices-routes plotted on paper charts, for instance, and port laborers locked in work camps-and dazzling technological triumphs.
*Foreign Affairs*

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