The<i> Chaldeans</i> offers a superbly textured account of the shifting interplay of religious, racial, national, and ethnic designations and self-designations of community identity, moving compellingly from the late Ottoman era to the present. Addressing the modern revival of ancient Mesopotamian civilization, Hanoosh develops a densely complex narrative of the fraught ideological politics swirling around “Iraq’s Christians," especially as articulated vis-à-vis Arabness and Islam. In this astute analysis of the efforts to stabilize definitions of belonging, the book insightfully captures the tensions and paradoxes embedded not simply in regional but rather in transnational processes of minoritization.
Ella Shohat, Author of Taboo Memories, Diasporic Voices
<i>The Chaldeans </i>is the first study that successfully frames the community in a social fields perspective and retains an analytic lucidity that makes the work beautifully clear for scholarly and classroom audiences alike. Hanoosh demonstrates an unmatched ability to weave together competing perspectives in a way that compassionately represents them without condescension or side-taking. The book's findings are impressive on their own, but I was doubly struck by her modeling of empathetic scholarship for the many communities she writes about. <i></i>
Stacy Fahrenthold, author of Between the Ottomans and the Entente: the First World War in the Syrian and Lebanese Diaspora, 1908- 1925
Hanoosh has written one of the most provocative ‘identity’ studies to date, compelling us to rethink key notion of relationality, citizenship, and displacement. <i>The Chaldeans </i>is a timely and sobering book precisely because it demonstrates that we come late in understanding the discursive politics that form our identities. Focusing on the complex historiography of Chaldean identities, it powerfully reveals how questions of ideology, history and geography set certain demands upon identity that can both be unsettling and revealing. This is a new classic that will forcefully redefine notions of minority, religion, ethnicity, and sectarianism in Iraq.
Mohammad Salama, author of Islam, Orientalism and Intellectual History: Modernity and the Politics of Exclusion since Ibn Khaldun
This is a vital book and essential reading for anyone who cares about the Christian minorities now living in a region beset by sectarian violence and colonial ambitions that map religious identities onto the landscape while also trying to erase them. <i>The Chaldeans </i>is brave, interesting, and well researched. It completely eviscerates the existing literature on the subject, which traps Chaldeans in their stores and churches and deprives them of political and cultural agency. Hanoosh’s exploration of these themes is personal and sharply critical. She nonetheless holds open the possibility of defining self and community in alternative ways that defy and transgress institutional and national framings.
Sally Howell, author of Old Islam in Detroit: Rediscovering the Muslim American Past