Great Powers in the Mediterranean


The European Institute launched a three-year project focusing on Great Powers in the Mediterranean in autumn of 2008.


Given that the Mediterranean has been the millennial crossroads of major civilizations, and that there have been so many powerful contenders for influence, this project considers the wide range of forces and resources the Great Powers must deploy to establish and sustain their influence. The project is thus concerned with studying not only major shifts in geopolitical influence and trade patterns, but also the domination pursued through commercial exchange, religious crusades, and the imposition of new developmental and cultural models, as well as the resistance to them. The focus is mainly the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, but also considers the Mediterranean area from the perspective of the longue durée.

 

Victoria de Grazia, Director of the European Institute, is leading this project, which includes the following participants:

  

Engin Deniz Akarli

Elena Astafieva

Elisabetta Bini

Jérôme Bocquet

Richard Bulliet

Terry Burke

Jeffrey Byrne

Nathan Citino

Nancy W. Collins

Victoria de Grazia

Eleanor Doumato

Marwa Elshakry

David Engerman

 

Roberta R. Ervine

Irene Gendzier

Joel Gordon

Haim Goren

Thomas Hummel

Valentina Izmirlieva

Tvrtko Jakovina

Pavle Jevremović

Ousmane Kane

Henry Laurens

Tim Mitchell

Issam Nassar

Mary Nolan

 

Neni Panourgia

Effie Pedaliu

Christine Philliou

Silvio Pons

Edward L. Queen II

Dominique Reill

Jane Schneider

Martin Sletzinger

Barin Kayaoglu

Yanni Kotsonis

Rinna E. Kullaa

John Lampe

Mahmood Mamdani

 

Konstantina Maragkou

Mark Mazower

Laura Robson

Anders Stephanson

J. Adam Tooze

Dominique Trimbur

Chantal Verdeil

Robert Vitalis

Polymeris Voglis

Dean Vuletic

Richard Wortman

Marilyn Young

Vladislav Zubok

 

 

Conferences

For more information, including programs and proceedings, please see the Conferences page.

Cold War in the Mediterranean: Connecting the Fronts

Led by Victoria de Grazia vd19@columbia.edu

14-15 November 2008

The Cold War was especially disruptive in the vast, diverse region encircling the Mediterranean Sea. The one-time European colonial powers withdrew or were expelled from the eastern and southern coasts, reorganizing themselves in the European Community with a North-Western and Trans-Atlantic orientation.  American analysts remapped the area in terms of “security regions,” and Soviet experts, in terms of the USSR’s quest for strategic partners. The newly emancipated countries stretching across North African and eastern Mediterranean coasts were essentially prevented from forming cross-Mediterranean solidarities by Superpower interference and by local  national, religious, and development conflicts aggravated by appealing to outside powers. To understand the Cold War’s impact in the region, we need a substantial effort to bridge areas of study—Southern Europe, North Africa, the Middle East—that have come to be  analyzed separately. Our Workshop’s main purpose was to explore the imprint left on the region as the two Superpowers stepped into European imperial shoes in the course of World War II and struggled to mark out their areas of hegemony thereafter, playing on local national, religious, and political conflicts, mainly in the period from the Greek Civil War and Italian elections of 1948 to the 1970s proxy wars in the Middle East.

 

The Non-Aligned Movement in the Mediterranean

Led by Rinna E. Kullaa, rk331@columbia.edu

13 February 2009

 

The Non-Aligned Movement was established to coordinate cooperation outside of the Cold War blocs. Born in the Mediterranean in the late 1950s, the movement sought to challenge superpower influence.  Its inaugural conference was at Belgrade, and the leading figures, aside from Nehru, were Tito and Nasser. Here its development was shaped by the radicalization of politics in the Cold War Mediterranean, the superpower confrontation, decolonization, and the struggles in the Arab world set off by the founding of the State of Israel. Through the perspective of this area, we take a new look at the meaning of non-alignment, its protagonists, notably Yugoslavia, and its ramifications for a  “third way” between the blocs. Our workshop’s main purpose is to bring together scholars with different disciplinary perspectives and expertise with respect to the Non-Aligned Movement in the region.

 

The Great Powers in the Holy Land: From Napoleon to the Balfour Declaration

Led by Elena Astafieva, ea2394@columbia.edu

3-4 April 2009

This workshop brought together American and non-American researchers working on the Great Powers' presence in the Holy Land and the Levant in the 19th century. On the macro-level, we examined the Western perception of this space and the ideology of expansion, as well as the conflicts between the Great Powers in this area. On the micro-level, we examined the special cases of the relationships between the local – Arab and Jewish – population and the missionaries. We focused particularly on the study of pilgrimages to the Holy Land not only as a phenomenon of the interaction between different religious traditions (notably Christian and Muslim), but also as a political tool of the Great Powers, such as France and the Russian Empire.


 

 

 

 

Films

 

Propaganda Cinema: The Marshall Plan Films and America’s Cold War Image in the Mediterranean

 

    A Foreign Affair

    Miracle of Casino

    Village Without Words

    30 October 2008

    Speaker: Victoria de Grazia

    Jour De Fète

    At the Foot of the Mountains

    Marshall Plan at Work in Turkey

    6 November 2008

    Speaker: Silvio Pons

 

    Press Release

 

                           

                           

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

           

 

 

 


This project is generously supported by The Harriman Institute.

 
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