Skip to content

Nationalising Oil and Knowledge in Iran

Labour, Decolonisation and Colonial Modernity, 193351

Mattin Biglari
Barcode 9781474489607
Hardback

Sold out
Original price £100.94 - Original price £100.94
Original price
£100.94
£100.94 - £100.94
Current price £100.94

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
Out of stock

Release Date: 28/02/2025

Genre: History
Sub-Genre: Technology & Engineering
Label: Edinburgh University Press
Series: Edinburgh Historical Studies of Iran and the Persian World
Language: English
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press

Labour, Decolonisation and Colonial Modernity, 193351
How did British oil production in Iran shape both subaltern anticolonialism and colonial afterlives in the country?

Iran's nationalisation of oil in 1951 was a key catalyst for the rise of resource nationalism as an animating force of global decolonisation, expelling the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC, now known as BP) after nearly fifty years of domination in southwest Iran. Nationalising Oil & Knowledge in Iran turns attention to the origins of nationalisation in the everyday struggles between the oil company and subaltern actors in the city of Abadan, then home to the world's largest oil refinery and deeply imbricated in networks of colonialism and racial capitalism.

Engaging with energy history, postcolonial/subaltern studies, and science & technology studies, the book focuses on the politics of expertise: how nationalisation reproduced the epistemic coloniality of the oil company, which rested on local dispossession, social engineering, as well as racial and gendered segregation. It argues that nationalisation diverged from subaltern contestations of oil expertise in Abadan, which presented a more fundamental challenge to colonial modernity.