Book Description
Kuwait by the First Photographers documents the period between 1900 and 1950, which saw Kuwait's emergence from a vulnerable sheikhdom negotiating a precarious independence among neighboring powers--the British in India and the Gulf, the Ottoman Turks in Mesopotamia, and the central Arabian chieftaincies of Ha'il and Riyadh--to a nation-state with the highest per capita income in the world. It is an outstanding visual record of a crucial time before the centuries-old way of life, centred on pearling, fishing, boat-building and trade by land and sea, was swept away. Kuwait's people, with no natural resources of their own, not even fresh water, managed by skillful use of their geopolitical position and traditional skills to make Kuwait not only the foremost Arabian port in the Gulf, but also a force to be reckoned with in north-east Arabia. European fascination with the Arab way of life is reflected in the photographs of many renowned travellers including Freya Stark, Alan Villiers and Wilfred Thesiger.
About the Author
William Facey is the author of Back to Earth: Adobe Building in Saudi Arabia and a Director of the London School of Arab Studies.
Gillian Grant is an archivist specializing in the care of photographic collections.
Kuwait by the First Photographers FROM THE PUBLISHER
Kuwait by the First Photographers documents the period between 1900 and 1950, which saw Kuwait's emergence from a vulnerable shaikhdom negotiating a precarious independence amongst neighbouring powers - the British in India and the Gulf, the Ottoman Turks in Mesopotamia, and the central Arabian chieftaincies of Ha'il and Riyadh - to a nation state with the highest per capita income in the world. It is an outstanding visual record of a crucial time before the centuries-old way of life, centring on pearling, fishing, boat-building and trade by land and sea, was swept away. Kuwait's people, with no natural resources of their own, not even fresh water, managed by skilful use of their geopolitical position and traditional skills to make Kuwait not only the foremost Arabian port in the Gulf, but also a force to be reckoned with in north-east Arabia. The pictures are organised broadly by chronology and photographer. Pictures are captioned in detail, and all picture sources - in the UK, US and Europe - are given, making this an indispensable guide for scholars of the region.
FROM THE CRITICS
Booknews
Documents the evolution of the desert port on the Arabian Peninsula into a nation state with the highest per-capita income in the world between 1900 and 1950. The earlier photographs record a traditional way of life centering on pearling, fishing, boat-building, and trade by land and sea that have been swept away by the new dependence on oil and its buyers. Indeed, almost nothing is shown of modern construction or industrialization. 11.25" deep. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.