Gathering the Dispersed: State Evasion and State-Making in Modern Jewish, Kurdish and Berber History

About the Project

Located at the intersection of Jewish Studies Studies, Kurdish Studies and Berber Studies, the research project “Gathering the Dispersed” focuses on the puzzling transition from state evasion to state-making in three non-state communities in the Middle East and North Africa: While Jewish, Kurdish and Berber/Amazigh communities in the 19th century were marked by different patterns of state evasion (physical dispersion, segmentary kinship, an acephalous social structure), nationalist movements sought to transform them into state-making communities (densely settled populations, governed by a central organization, unified in language and culture). Despite pressure from outside forces and committed resistance from within their communities, the Zionist movement established a robust nation-state (Israel), Kurdish nationalists built a fledgling proto-state (Kurdistan Regional Government – Iraq), and Berber activists mobilized a growing transnational movement for greater Berber autonomy in the Maghreb. By bringing together scholars from the fields of Jewish Studies, Kurdish Studies and Amazigh Studies, the research group will contribute to theory-building on stateless politics by translating the framework of James Scott (The Art of Not Being Governed, 2009) into a Middle Eastern context. 

Team

Prof. Dr. Johannes Becke

Johannes Becke is professor of Israel and Middle East Studies at the Heidelberg Center for Jewish Studies and head of the research group “Gathering the Dispersed” at the HCTS. His research projects and publications cover the field of comparative politics in Israel and the Middle East, with research focuses on nationalism, state formation, and Arab-Israeli relations. He is the author of “The Land Beyond the Border. State Formation and Territorial Expansion in Syria, Morocco and Israel” (SUNY Press, 2021) and the co-editor of the volume “Israel-Studien: Geschichte - Methoden - Paradigmen” (Wallstein, 2020). Together with Frederek Musall and Beyza Arslan, he is directing the podcast “Mecca and Jerusalem” (in German) on Muslim-Jewish relations. He also organizes, in cooperation with Michael Brenner and Daniel Mahla, the Research Colloquium on Israel and the Middle East.