
Contents
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Anatomies of the Sheikh Anatomies of the Sheikh
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Creating Arabiastan Creating Arabiastan
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When Fantasy Grates against Reality When Fantasy Grates against Reality
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Reading the Desert Romance as an Allegory of U.S. Exceptionalism Reading the Desert Romance as an Allegory of U.S. Exceptionalism
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Narrating Benevolent Technologies of Imperialism Narrating Benevolent Technologies of Imperialism
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Mapping Desire Mapping Desire
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Unknown Knowns Unknown Knowns
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Irradiated by Desire Irradiated by Desire
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Introduction: The Romantic Sheikh as Hero of the War on Terror
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Published:July 2015
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Abstract
Introducing the figure of the sheikh-hero, and locating him in the larger cultural history of this figure in U.S. popular culture, the introduction argues that desert romances demonstrate how fantasy and desire propel the war on terror. Centering desire enables a consideration of the way that contemporary imperialism operates in a seemingly benevolent or benign register, one that relies on the idea of exceptionalism as a founding logic of the United States. Foregrounding the question of how subjects are encouraged to desire their own repression, the introduction establishes the concepts of security, freedom, and liberal multiculturalism as key technologies in the war on terror. It argues that subjects are encouraged to desire security, freedom, and liberal multiculturalism, which are framed as exceptional qualities of the U.S., while operating as imperialist technologies.
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