JMD on NBN: Sean Foley's Changing Saudi Arabia
August 8,
2019 James M. Dorsey
In Changing
Saudi Arabia, Art, Culture and Society in the Kingdom (Lynne Rienner,
2019), Sean Foley
offers eye-opening insights into a changing society that is under the
international magnifying glass. Using the prism of an exploding arts scene
populated by artists, comedians, actors, directors and masters of new media
from diverse backgrounds, Foley paints a granular picture of a country that
figures prominently in global geopolitics. Breaking with the traditional
geopolitical, political and economic paradigm that dominates scholarship and
analysis of a kingdom widely viewed as increasingly autocratic and brutal under
de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Foley illustrates the margins
within which the arts scene seeks to stimulate conversations on often taboo
subjects and express criticism by couching it in constructive rather than
explicitly critical terms. It involves a balancing act in which artists are
forced to be critical and supportive of the regime at the same time. In
describing the evolution of the arts scene, Foley also paints a much more
layered picture of Prince Mohammed whose reputation as a reformer has been
sullied by his crackdown on dissent and the killing in 2018 of journalist Jamal
Khashoggi in the kingdom’s consulate in Istanbul. The evolution of a non-traditional
arts scene is as much organic as it is a reflection of the generational
transition in the kingdom’s absolute monarchical rule and an instinctive
understanding that survival in the 21st century rests on a more complex set of
factors than it did in the last century. With his well-written and erudite
analysis, Foley has made a significant contribution to the literature and
understanding of the dynamics that are changing the kingdom for better or for
worse.
To listen
to the podcast, click here
James M.
Dorsey is a senior fellow at Nanyang Technological University S. Rajaratnam
School of International Studies and the National University of Singapore’s
Middle East Institute.
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