Joyriding in Riyadh :Oil, Urbanism, and Road Revolt ( Cambridge Middle East Studies )

Publication subTitle :Oil, Urbanism, and Road Revolt

Publication series :Cambridge Middle East Studies

Author: Pascal Menoret  

Publisher: Cambridge University Press‎

Publication year: 2014

E-ISBN: 9781139898850

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9781107035485

Subject: K History and Geography

Keyword: 历史、地理

Language: ENG

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Joyriding in Riyadh

Description

Why do young Saudis, night after night, joyride and skid cars on Riyadh's avenues? Who are these 'drifters' who defy public order and private property? What drives their revolt? Based on four years of fieldwork in Riyadh, Pascal Menoret's Joyriding in Riyadh explores the social fabric of the city and connects it to Saudi Arabia's recent history. Car drifting emerged after Riyadh was planned, and oil became the main driver of the economy. For young rural migrants, it was a way to reclaim alienating and threatening urban spaces. For the Saudi state, it jeopardized its most basic operations: managing public spaces and enforcing law and order. A police crackdown soon targeted car drifting, feeding a nation-wide moral panic led by religious activists who framed youth culture as a public issue. This book retraces the politicization of Riyadh youth and shows that, far from being a marginal event, car drifting is embedded in the country's social violence and economic inequality.

Chapter

1.4. Reflexive Anthropology and the War on Terror

1.5. Saudi Youth and the Politics of Representation

1.6. Plan of the Book

2 Repression and Fieldwork

2.1. In the Steppes of Upper Najd

2.2. Loyalists, Islamists, and Jihadists

2.3. Down and Out in Najd

2.4. Activism and Frustration

2.5. Surveillance and Repression

2.6. Violence and Fun

3 City of the Future

3.1. Saudi Suburbia

3.2. Doxiadis and Containment Urbanism

3.3. Bedouin Removal

3.4. Mobility and Slums

3.5. Land Is Political

3.6. “Mecca-Oriented Roads”

4 The Business of Development

4.1. Parking Crisis in Sulaymaniyya

4.2. The Urban Consequences of the Oil Boom

4.3. The Saudi Exception

4.4. “The Inhumanity of the Place”

4.5. “You Don’t Need to Innovate”

4.6. Urban Space, Contentious Space

5 Street Terrorism

5.1. Public Disorder

5.2. Joyriding and Social Suffering

5.3. The Story of Joyriding

5.4. “If You Have a Lexus, You Are a Lexus”

5.5. Reclaiming Urban Interstices

5.6. “Sexy Boys Compete for You”

6 Street Politics

6.1. The Death of Sharari

6.2. “Either Death or Repentance”

6.3. A State Sociology of Joyriding

6.4. Moral Panic

6.5. Criminologists and Policemen

6.6. “Camry Plays, Police Puke”

Epilogue

Notes

Bibliography

Photo Credits

Index

Series list

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