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Dr Katayoun Shafiee (University of Warwick), Machineries of Oil: An Infrastructural History of BP in Iran (2018)

  • Room: R201, SOAS Main Building SOAS University of London, 10 Thornhaugh Street London, England, WC1H 0XG United Kingdom (map)

Histories of Capitalism and Race in the Middle East and Indian Ocean seminar series

Dr Katayoun Shafiee (University of Warwick) will be speaking about Machineries of Oil: An Infrastructural History of BP in Iran (MIT Press, 2018), followed by a group discussion of the book.

Registration is required and attendees are encouraged to read the pre-circulated extracts in advance.

Book blurb:

In the early twentieth century, international oil corporations emerged as a new kind of political actor. The development of the world oil industry, argues Katayoun Shafiee, was one of the era's largest political projects of techno-economic development. In this book, Shafiee maps the machinery of oil operations in the Anglo-Iranian oil industry between 1901 and 1954, tracking the organizational work involved in moving oil through a variety of technical, legal, scientific, and administrative networks. She shows that, in a series of disagreements, the British-controlled Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC, which later became BP) relied on various forms of information management to transform political disputes into techno-economic calculation, guaranteeing the company complete control over profits, labor, and production regimes. She argues that the building of alliances and connections that constituted Anglo-Iranian oil's infrastructure reconfigured local politics of oil regions and examines how these arrangements in turn shaped the emergence of both nation-state and transnational oil corporation.

Drawing on her extensive archival and field research in Iran, Shafiee investigates the surprising ways in which nature, technology, and politics came together in battles over mineral rights; standardizing petroleum expertise; formulas for calculating profits, production rates, and labor; the “Persianization” of employees; nationalism and oil nationalization; and the long-distance machinery of an international corporation. Her account shows that the politics of oil cannot be understood in isolation from its technical dimensions.


Registration is required.

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23 November

Dr Johan Mathew (Rutgers University), Margins of the Market: Trafficking and Capitalism across the Arabian Sea (2016)

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8 December

Dr Andrew b. Liu (Villanova University), Tea War: A History of Capitalism in China and India (2020)