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Full Description
Monsoon Voyagers follows the voyage of a single dhow, the Crooked, along with its captain and crew, from Kuwait to port cities around the Persian Gulf and Western Indian Ocean, from 1924 to 1925. Through his account of the voyage, Fahad Ahmad Bishara unpacks a much broader history of circulation and exchange across the Arabian Sea in the time of empire. From their offices in India, Arabia, and East Africa, Gulf merchants used the technologies of colonial capitalism—banks, steamships, railroads, telegraphs, and more—to remake their own regional bazaar economy. In the process, they remade the Gulf itself. Drawing on the Crooked's first-person logbooks, along with letters, notes, and business accounts from a range of port cities, Monsoon Voyagers narrates the still-untold connected histories of the Gulf and Indian Ocean. The Gulf's past, it suggests, played out across the sea as much as it did the land.
Contents
Contents
Acknowledgments
Prologue: The Logbook
1. Kuwait
Inscription: Debts
2. The Shatt Al-ʿArab
Inscription: Freightage
3. The Gulf
Inscription: Passage
4. The Sea of Oman
Inscription: Guides
5. Karachi to Kathiawar
Inscription: Letters
6. Bombay
Inscription: Transfers
7. Malabar
Inscription: Conversions
8. Crossings
Inscription: Maps
9. Muscat
Inscription: Poems
10. Bahrain
Inscription: Accounts
11. Returns
Epilogue: Triumph and Loss
Notes
Bibliography
Index



