In this highly original environmental history, Samuel Dolbee sheds new
light on borders and state formation by following locusts and revealing
how they shaped both the environment and people's imaginations from the
late Ottoman Empire to the Second World War. Drawing on a wide range of
archival research in multiple languages, Dolbee details environmental,
political, and spatial transformations in the region's history by
tracing the movements of locusts and their intimate relationship to
people in motion, including Arab and Kurdish nomads, Armenian deportees,
and Assyrian refugees, as well as states of the region. With locusts and
moving people at center stage, surprising continuities and ruptures
appear in the Jazira, the borderlands of today's Iraq, Syria, and
Turkey. Transcending approaches focused on the collapse of the Ottoman
Empire or the creation of nation states, Dolbee provides a new
perspective on the modern Middle East grounded in environmental change,
state violence, and popular resistance.