The government of Yemen, unified since 1990, remains largely incapable of controlling violence or providing goods and services to its population, but the regime continues to endure despite its fragility and peripheral location in the global political and economic order. Revealing what holds Yemen together in such tenuous circumstances, Peripheral Visions shows how citizens form national attachments even in the absence of strong state institutions. Lisa Wedeen, who spent a year and a half in Yemen observing and interviewing its residents, argues that national solidarity in such weak states tends to arise not from attachments to institutions but through both extraordinary events and the ordinary activities of everyday life. Yemenis, for example, regularly gather to chew qat, a leafy drug similar to caffeine, as they engage in wide-ranging and sometimes influential public discussions of even the most divisive political and social issues. These lively debates exemplify Wedeen’s contention that democratic, national, and pious solidarities work as ongoing, performative practices that enact and reproduce a citizenry’s shared points of reference. Ultimately, her skillful evocations of such practices shift attention away from a narrow focus on government institutions and electoral competition and toward the substantive experience of participatory politics.
Author(s): Lisa Wedeen
Year: 2008
Language: English
Pages: 320
Contents......Page 8
List of Maps......Page 10
Acknowledgments......Page 12
Introduction......Page 18
Imagining unity......Page 39
Seeing like a citizen, acting like a state......Page 84
The politics of deliberation: QAT chews as public spheres......Page 126
Practicing piety, summoning groups: disorder as control......Page 171
Piety in time: contemporary islamic movements in national and transnational contexts......Page 209
Politics as performative......Page 235
Notes......Page 246
Bibliography......Page 286
Index......Page 314