Preface
Introduction
Maria Kousis, Tom Selwyn and David Clark
PART I: RECOVERING THE MEDITERRANEAN
Chapter 1. On Bureaucratic Essentialism: Constructing the Mediterranean in European Union Institutions
Vasiliki Yiakoumaki
Chapter 2. European 'Securitisation Policies' and the Southern 'Fortress-Europe'
Minas Samatas
Chapter 3. Locating the 'Mediterranean' in Music: The Medi-Terra music festival
Eleni Kallimopoulou
PART II: STATE, CAPITAL AND RESISTANCE
Chapter 4. Spaces of War, spaces of Memory: Popular expressions of politics in post-war Beirut
Sune Haugbolle
Chapter 5. Environmentalists in Malta: The growing voice of civil society
Jeremy Boissevain and Caroline Gatt
Chapter 6. Governing Coastal Biodiversity: Caretta caretta in Zakynthos and Crete
Maria Kousis and Katerina Psarikidou
PART III: CAPITAL AND NEIGHBOURHOOD GOVERNANCE
Chapter 7. Contested Politics of the Mediterranean: Star Street and the struggle for development in Bethlehem Carol
Sansour Dabdoub and Carol Zoughbi-Janineh
Chapter 8. Contentious Politics at a Bosphorus Neighbourhood: Perspectives on conflict and solidarity during the 20th Century
Günham Danisman and Ismail Üstün
Chapter 9. Playing Snakes and Ladders in Ciutat de Mallorca: An ethnographic approach to the production of the neighbourhood scale
Marc A. Morell and Jaume Franquesa
PART IV: TRANSFORMING IDENTITIES: IMAGINATION AND REPRESENTATIONS
Chapter 10. Ethnicised inter-religious conflicts in contemporary Granada, Spain
Javier Rosón Lorente and Gunther Dietz
Chapter 11. Governance, Alliance and Resistance: Jewish museums in Italy
David Clark
Chapter 12. The Making of Home away from Home: The Role of Ethno-cultural Festivals in contesting local spaces
Elia Vardaki
Chapter 13. Tears on the Border: The case of Rachel's Tomb, Bethlehem, Palestine
Tom Selwyn
List of Contributors
Bibliography
Index
Maria Kousis is Professor of Sociology at the University of Crete. Her publications include a two volume special issue of American Behavioral Scientist on Mediterranean Political Processes in Historical-Comparative Perspective (with Charles Tilly and Roberto Franzosi, 2008).
"It is well known that Charles Tilly left scholars of big structures, large processes, and huge comparisons a tall research agenda. It is less acknowledged that he also left political ethnographers an impressive and provocative set of tools. In the skilled hands of the contributors to this insightful volume, the 'Tilly toolbox' is put to good work in the service of a theory-driven and empirically-grounded exploration of Mediterranean contentious landscapes." · Javier Auyero, University of Texas, Austin; Editor, Qualitative Sociology
"Contested Mediterranean Spaces rescues a cultural geography from the essentialist circularities to which it was once often reduced. These authors examine how circum-Mediterranean identities, at every level from the clan to the nation-state, exhibit the complex impact of ideological and political manipulation. They show how this hothouse of Europe's self-ascribed cultural origins has been characteristically prey to spatial cleansing, gentrification, and bigotry; they also document a regional activism that seeks more tolerant and environmentally benign futures. By problematizing the political and intellectual manipulations as well as the ideological tensions that inform such revivals of the Mediterranean as category and concept, they persuasively refurbish a tired regionalism with refreshing critical and comparative interest." · Michael Herzfeld, Harvard University; Author of Evicted from Eternity: The Restructuring of Rome