Skip to product information
1 of 1

Kuwait Transformed

Regular price $28.00
Sale price $28.00 Regular price $28.00
Sale Sold out
As the first Gulf city to experience oil urbanization, Kuwait City's transformation in the mid-twentieth century inaugurated a now-familiar regional narrative: a small traditional town of mudbrick ...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 13 April 2016
View Product Details

As the first Gulf city to experience oil urbanization, Kuwait City's transformation in the mid-twentieth century inaugurated a now-familiar regional narrative: a small traditional town of mudbrick courtyard houses and plentiful foot traffic transformed into a modern city with marble-fronted buildings, vast suburbs, and wide highways.

In Kuwait Transformed, Farah Al-Nakib connects the city's past and present, from its settlement in 1716 to the twenty-first century, through the bridge of oil discovery. She traces the relationships between the urban landscape, patterns and practices of everyday life, and social behaviors and relations in Kuwait. The history that emerges reveals how decades of urban planning, suburbanization, and privatization have eroded an open, tolerant society and given rise to the insularity, xenophobia, and divisiveness that characterize Kuwaiti social relations today. The book makes a call for a restoration of the city that modern planning eliminated. But this is not simply a case of nostalgia for a lost landscape, lifestyle, or community. It is a claim for a "right to the city"—the right of all inhabitants to shape and use the spaces of their city to meet their own needs and desires.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $28.00
Pages: 296
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Publication Date: 13 April 2016
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780804798525
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"Farah Al-Nakib debunks some tenacious myths about modernist urban planning: far from creating a happier, more productive urban environment, it fostered bleak suburbs marked by class, gender, and race segregation. Her superb book is a hymn to everyday Kuwaitis who, after sixty years of urban upheaval, struggle to reclaim the right to their city."—Pascal Menoret, Brandeis University, author of Joyriding in Riyadh: Oil, Urbanism, and Road Revolt
Farah Al-Nakib is Assistant Professor of History and Director of the Center for Gulf Studies at the American University of Kuwait.
Introduction
1. Pre-Oil Urbanism
2. Port City Life
3. A Cosmopolitan Community
4. Oil-Era Modernization
5. The Move to the Suburbs
6. The Privatization of Urban Life
7. The De-Urbanization of Society
8. The Right to the City