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Unmaking North and South

Cartographies of the Yemeni Past

By John M. Willis, assistant professor of history

Columbia University Press

John M. Willis revisits state formation and religious reform in Yemen during a period of imperialism, transition, and crisis (1857-1934). He focuses specifically on the British Aden Protectorate, which carved a series of "native states" out of Yemen's southern territory based on the model of princely India, and the Zaydi-Shiite Imamate of the Hamid al-Din family, which established a hybrid state in the north combining elements of the Ottoman state model with Sunni reformist ideology.

Treating each of these areas as politically, socially and morally bounded spaces, Willis traces the extent to which modern Yemeni history is rooted both in the structures of the British Raj and the intellectual debates of the larger Sunni-Muslim world.

Willis draws on case studies that examine imperial state ritual, arms-smuggling practices, cartography and colonial ethnography, the nature of Islamic polity, and the undeclared war between Britain and the Yemeni Imamate, emphasizing Yemen's trans-regional history.

Deftly moving between local, modern, colonial, and Islamic narratives, Willis challenges the inevitability of historical outcomes during Yemen's postcolonial period and suggests different conceptions of the country’s contested past.