TY - BOOK AU - Pétriat, Philippe, TI - The last caravan : : camels, traders and markets in the Middle East SN - 9781009524520 AV - DS62 .P388 2024 PY - 2024/// CY - Cambridge, New York PB - Cambridge University Press KW - Caravans KW - Middle East KW - History KW - Commerce KW - Economic conditions KW - Politics and government N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; What we mean when we talk about the cultural landscape — Using brands as landmarks for mapping the cultural landscape — Brand capital, perspective, and power — The role of gender — Case Study – Gender – Virgin Atlantic and Bud Light — The importance of authenticity — Brand activism as power dynamic — Case Study – Activism – Kate Spade Change Please — Ownership as power — The transience of power in the cultural landscape — Case Study – Shifting power – Skype, Burberry, and Old Spice — TLDR – the application to industry N2 - What can travelling camels tell us about the history of the interior of the Middle East? In this innovative book Philippe Pétriat demonstrates how caravans - groups of travellers, often on trade expeditions, journeying together for mutual protection in hostile regions - are essential to understanding the history of the inside territories of the Ottoman Empire with its neighbours. From the first use of camels in transport, through to the decline of the caravan from the 1930s onwards, Pétriat reconstructs the land routes of these travellers through vast steppes and deserts in captivating detail. Moving discussions of the political economy of the Ottoman and post-Ottoman Middle East beyond analysis of the coastal regions and maritime exchanges with Western countries, The Last Caravan instead reveals the pivotal importance of the Ottoman and Arab merchants in the suburbs of the cities and the rural markets and the travelling nomads and the animals that supported them. Provides a comprehensive history of the Middle East that does not focus on cities and coastal regions and instead on travel routes through the deserts — Connects the Ottoman and the post-Ottoman history of the region and emphasizes its connections to neighbouring regions such as African Sahara and Eurasian steppes, both de-exceptionalizing the history of the Middle East, and providing the connected features of its history — Provides a fresh understanding of the nomadic peoples of the Middle-East interior, and their pivotal impact on the economy of the region ER -