Imperialism was a masterclass in maintaining the fiction of autonomy while quietly acquiring the assets of an empire. Professor James Onley, chair of Gulf and Arab Studies at the American University of Sharjah, dissects the sophisticated loopholes used by colonial powers to exert influence without the liabilities of formal control. This conversation highlights the deep-seated socioeconomic connections between India and the Gulf, a relationship far older than the modern state system. Dr. Onley provides a nuanced look at the collaborative nature of empire on the cheap, where local elites often navigated British protection to secure their own regional interests. From the arrival of Arab nationalism to the digital preservation of over two million archival pages in the Qatar Digital Library, this dialogue reveals the shifting layers of identity and power that have shaped the Arabian Peninsula.
Imperialism was a masterclass in maintaining the fiction of autonomy while quietly acquiring the assets of an empire. Professor James Onley, chair of Gulf and Arab Studies at the American University of Sharjah, dissects the sophisticated loopholes used by colonial powers to exert influence without the liabilities of formal control. This conversation highlights the deep-seated socioeconomic connections between India and the Gulf, a relationship far older than the modern state system. Dr. Onley provides a nuanced look at the collaborative nature of empire on the cheap, where local elites often navigated British protection to secure their own regional interests. From the arrival of Arab nationalism to the digital preservation of over two million archival pages in the Qatar Digital Library, this dialogue reveals the shifting layers of identity and power that have shaped the Arabian Peninsula.
0:00 Introduction
5:11 Distinctive Traits of British Presence in the Gulf
9:05 Millennia of Deep-seated Indo-Gulf Ties
13:17 Divergent Theories on Imperial Motivations
15:40 Indigenous Collaboration and the Native Agent Network
18:49 Transitioning from Formal Control to Security Guarantees
19:57 The Enduring Economic Gravity of India
23:01 Navigating the Administrative Hierarchies of Empire
24:45 Legal Fictions and the Optics ofinfluence
28:04 Shared sovereignty and empire on the Cheap
32:55 Friction and Resistance Across the Regional Map
36:40 Shifting Layers of Identity Before Nationalism
41:40 Reorienting from the Indian Ocean to the Arab World
54:36 Digital Preservation and the Democratizing of Archives
James Onley is the Ahmed Seddiqi Chair in Gulf & Arab Studies and Professor of History. He specializes in the history and heritage of the Gulf region, the Gulf's historical connections with South Asia, archives and archival digitization, and digital humanities. He is Founding Editor of the Journal of Arabian Studies (est. 2011). Before joining AUS, he was Director of Historical Research at Qatar National Library, responsible for digitizing historical records for the Qatar Digital Library (www.QDL.qa), and Director of the Centre for Gulf Studies at the University of Exeter.
Connect with James Onley 👉 https://instagram.com/@james_onley