Introduction - The Power of Narratives in Political Contexts.- Part I - Non-State Actors and Regional Powers Narrating and Reshaping Order: Wartime Narratives of Hezbollah Militants in the Syrian Conflict.- Chasing the Wind: Clashes of Israeli and Palestinian Narratives,.- Turkey as the Order-producing Country: Narrating the ‘New Turkey’ in the Middle East.- Evolving Narratives of Political Contestation and Geopolitical Rivalry in the Persian Gulf.- Part II - Global Players' Narratives Towards MENA Instability: Russia in the Middle East: In Search of Its Place.- China and the Middle East: Narrating Multi-polarity.-American Narratives of Order-building in the Middle East: Dashed Visions on the Nile.- The European Union’s Epic Conceptualisations of the Southern Neighbourhood: a Narratological Take on the Mediterranean Story.- Conclusion: Narrative (Dis)Order in Today’s MENA.
Wolfgang Mühlberger is a Senior Research Fellow at the Finnish Institute of International Affairs, where his work focuses on the MENA region and Euro-Mediterranean relations. Previously he worked as a researcher at the Austrian Defence Academy (Institute for Conflict Management and Peace Support), as Director of Government Relations MENA with the Economist Intelligence Unit and as Political Officer for the Austrian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Ramallah/oPt. His research interests include political transitions, conflict analysis as well as militant and political Islamic organisations. Wolfgang received his M.Phil. in Islamic and Arabic Studies and his M.Sc. in Economics and Business Administration while conducting research and learning Arabic in Morocco, Tunisia, Syria and Yemen. He is the author, co-author and editor of over 50 publications, including two monographs on progressive Muslim reformers and Syrian civil war scenarios.
Toni Alaranta has obtained his PhD in Social Sciences from University of Helsinki, Finland, in 2012. Currently a Senior Research Fellow at the Finnish Institute of International Affairs, his main field of interests are Turkish politics and history, Kemalism, and international relations of the modern period.
This book discusses the role of political narratives in shaping perceptions of instability and conceptions of order in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). The authors illustrate how, in times of socio-political turmoil and outbursts of discontent such as the Arab Spring, political entrepreneurs explain and justify their political agendas by complementing hard power solutions with attractive ideas and discursive constructions that appeal to domestic constituencies and geopolitical allies.
The book is divided into two parts. The first focuses on non-state actors, such as confessional communities and ideological movements, who aim to develop narratives that are convincing to their respective polities. It also studies regional powers that seek to determine their positions in a competitive environment via distinctive narrations of order. In part two, the authors investigate the narratives of global players that aim to explain and justify their role in an evolving international order.