|
Imagined
Youths
Ted Swedenburg
Ted
Swedenburg, an editor of this magazine, teaches anthropology
at the University of Arkansas.

Youth gather in a Baghdad park at the end of Ramadan. (Ceerwan
Aziz/Reuters/Landov) |
Youth—what
is it? The notion tends to be taken for granted, as a natural
stage in human development. But, in fact, “youth” is a socially
and culturally determined category, a transitional phase between
childhood and adulthood that, in its contemporary form, is a
product of modernity. In the pre-modern era, adolescents were
usually regarded as troublemakers, and so it was customary to
marry them off soon after the onset of puberty, giving them adult
responsibilities in order to stave off any social threat and
ensure uninterrupted agrarian and pastoral production. The forces
of modernity, and in particular the forms of education that capitalist
production requires, have greatly extended the period of youth
and delayed the age of marriage. Youth today is typically defined
as a phase in life between the ages of 15 and 24, but in practice
one’s youth knows very fuzzy bounds. Young men in the Middle
East may belong to this social category well into their thirties,
due to the economic difficulties that many of them face in getting
married.
Delayed marriage
is one of several socio-economic realities—another being high
unemployment—that has had Western observers and regional governments
worried about a youth “problem” in the Middle East for decades.
Samuel Huntington, for instance, has argued famously that the
large number of unemployed males between 15 and 30 constitute
“a natural source of instability and violence.” And poor countries
are not the only ones thought to have a problem: “Too often Muslims
are against physical labor, so they bring in Koreans and Pakistanis
while their young people remain unemployed,” mused ex-Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld in one of his “snowflake” memoranda.
“An unemployed population is easy to recruit to radicalism.”[1] Such
concerns have been felt as urgent because twentieth-century public
health advances have created a “youth bulge” in the region’s
demographic profile: In most countries of the region, at least
20 percent of the population is between 15 and 24 (though,
as the adjacent chart shows, such “bulges” are not unusual in
other populous, non-Western countries). The flip side of this
coin for Westerners is to see the rising generations, “globalized”
by technology and the allure of liberal capitalism, as the agents
of inexorable “change” in countries perceived as mired in stagnation
or worse.
Problem
Children
| Percentage
of Population Aged 15-24 (2005) |
| Algeria |
22.6 |
| Bahrain |
16.1 |
| Egypt |
20.8 |
| Iran |
25.2 |
| Iraq |
20.1 |
| Israel |
16.1 |
| Jordan |
20.4 |
| Kuwait |
16.0 |
| Lebanon |
18.0 |
| Libya |
21.7 |
| Morocco |
21.1 |
| Oman |
21.5 |
| Palestine |
19.3 |
| Qatar |
13.9 |
| Saudi
Arabia |
18.5 |
| Sudan |
20.1 |
| Syria |
23.2 |
| Tunisia |
20.9 |
| Turkey |
18.6 |
| UAE |
16.3 |
| Western
Sahara |
20.1 |
| Yemen |
21.6 |
| Brazil |
18.9 |
| India |
19.3 |
| Indonesia |
19.0 |
| Mexico |
18.2 |
| Nigeria |
20.3 |
| South
Africa |
20.0 |
| World |
17.1 |
| United
States |
14.3 |
| Source:
UN Population Division, World Population Prospects:
The 2006 Revision (2007), www.esa.un.org/unpp. |
|
It has frequently
been claimed that the so-called youth problem of the Middle East
is essentially a demographic one: There are simply too many of
them. Typically cited as evidence are the high percentages of
young people, that in Iran in 2005, for instance, 25 percent
of the population was between 14 and 25.[2] Others argue, however, that the problem is not
so much demographics as the expectations generated by the forces
of modernization. The Middle East has witnessed a massive and
rapid increase in its educated young population, and in particular,
a dramatic growth in the number of educated females. Large numbers
are entering the labor market and are unable to find jobs commensurate
with their education. High rates of unemployment and under-employment
particularly afflict those with higher levels of education, and
such problems are exacerbated in countries undergoing “structural
adjustment,” where employment opportunities are declining in
state-owned firms and the bureaucracy. In addition, young people
who hope to become financially and socially independent, which
means finding suitable employment, leaving home and setting up
a household as part of a married couple, frequently face critical
shortages of housing. (Somewhat different problems affect less
privileged classes in both urban and rural areas, where many
young people enter the work force at an early age.) And when
marriage is, for most, the only sanctioned outlet for sexual
activity, the issue of what young people do in their spare time
becomes particularly salient for elites.
Youth were
not always perceived as a crisis in the making. During the optimistic
years that succeeded independence (as in Egypt after 1952) or
revolution (as in Iran after 1979), youth symbolized the future
of the modern nation that the state hoped to build. Whereas the
older, under-educated generation represented backwardness, the
youth were imagined to be the recipients of a modern progressive
education and the imbibers of state-propagated ideology. In Iran,
youth were regarded as the index of the success of the state
in creating a true Islamic Republic, until the success of the
state’s pro-natalist policies prompted a rethinking.[3] In Turkey during the Kemalist
era, educated youth were viewed as the main instrument of the
state’s national civilizational project.
The trajectory
of the image of youth in Turkey may be taken as an exemplary
case. During the late 1960s and early 1970s, when violent conflict
erupted on university campuses between leftist and rightist students,
youth came to be reimagined in public discourse as a “threat”
to the national interest.[4] This theme, of “dangerous” youth, has become
increasingly common in public discourse in Middle Eastern countries.
But in contrast to how the theme is understood in the West, where
youth is “dangerous” because the young are self-motivated delinquents,
in the Middle East it is more frequent for young people to be
seen as vulnerable innocents. The forces which are said to threaten
youth are various and changeable, depending on the context, and
depending on the political affiliation of the commentator.
Westernization
is regarded across the board as one of the greatest sources of
danger to susceptible youth. Western culture and its immoral
values (related forces include Zionism and globalization) threaten
youth with the evils of HIV/AIDS, premarital sex, drugs, suicide,
Satanism and so on. A related threat is the media, held as responsible
for relaying corrupting influences to young people, and therefore
film, music, radio and satellite TV broadcasts, and the Internet
are all foci of great concern. In Egypt such dangers are usually
summed up as the “cultural invasion” (ghazw thaqafi),
which foists bad morals and “vulgar” culture—the macarena, Madonna
and Michael Jackson—upon youth, leaving them without viable national
role models, only alien and decadent ones.[5]
The Daddy
State
Symptomatic
of such perceptions about the dangerous potentiality of youth
and their need for supervision, instruction and protection is
the fact that states explicitly view themselves as surrogate
parents (and especially “fathers”) for the country’s youth. One
facet of this assumed parental role has been the establishment
of Ministries of Youth and Sports, many set up during the 1990s,
for instance, the Palestinian Authority’s in 1994 and Egypt’s
in 1998. (In Tunisia, the parallel body is known as the Ministry
of Youth, Sports and Physical Education.) The purpose of such
ministries is to develop a national youth policy and youth programs.
It is telling,
of course, that government policy and discourse links youth and
sports so intimately. Sports are regarded as a way of channeling
youthful energies into activities that are wholesome and, not
coincidentally, serve as means of bringing glory to the nation.
Saudi Arabia established the General Presidency of Youth Welfare
in 1974, in part with the aim of fostering boys’ interest in
sports, and by 1994 it reportedly had established strong programs
in 18,000 schools throughout the kingdom.[6] The
importance that states attach to sports as a youth policy can
be gauged by the fact that such ministerial posts are not necessarily
honorary sinecures for politically unimportant figures. Algeria’s
current president, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, got his start in government
as minister of youth and sports. ‘Ali al-Din Hilal Disouqi, who
recently gave up his post as Egypt’s minister of youth and sports,
has been touted as one of the main mentors of Gamal Mubarak,
who to all appearances is being groomed to succeed his father,
Husni, as president.[7] And then there is Uday Hussein, son of former Iraqi dictator
Saddam Hussein, and his notorious tenure as head of Iraq’s Olympic
Committee and national soccer team (as well as the youth television
network Shabab).

Two young porters in Tehran’s main bazaar. (Bruno Stevens) |
States also
make great efforts to guide youth through the ideological work
of institutions devoted to education and health, conscription
into the military, and the establishment of state-directed youth
and student unions. The concern of the state, then, is not simply
protection of its youth from danger, but national and social
reproduction, the project of ensuring that young people do not
deviate from the transcendent goal of maintaining the integrity
of the nation.[8]
Market
Niche
Dick Hebdige
has observed that the two key themes in modern representations
of Western youth are “youth as trouble” and “youth as fun.”[9] The
images of “youth as fun” emerged amidst post-World War II affluence
and the development of the category of the “teenager.” Such images
depend on the ability of youth to participate as independent
agents in consumer culture and on the growth of market niches
targeted at youth. There is evidence to suggest that youth are
a growing target for marketers and advertisers, particularly
in the more affluent Gulf countries. The Middle East contains
some of the globe’s fastest-growing ad markets and audiences;
Dubai is the advertising hub and Saudi Arabia contains the largest
audience, while Lebanon supplies the local creative talent.[10] The State Department has even
dipped into these waters, launching a slick lifestyle magazine
in 2003 called Hi, aimed at the same affluent Arab youth
targeted by Dubai’s advertising agencies—but apparently failing
to gain enough readers, and ad revenue, to sustain itself.[11] The
glossy was “suspended” in 2005.
There is abundant
evidence to suggest that increasing numbers of Middle Eastern
youth are participating, to various degrees and in various ways,
in a globalized capitalist youth culture. Although this is good
for business, the processes of incorporation of youth as consumers
are full of contradictions and pitfalls. In Turkey, for instance,
today’s youth are regarded as shallow, individualistic, driven
by crass desires for consumption, apolitical and insufficiently
nationalist. It is common in Turkish public discourse for young
people to be found wanting in comparison to what are regarded
as the more “heroic” previous generations, especially those of
the nationalist (Kemalist) or revolutionary (“Sixties”) eras.[12] On
the other hand, even supposedly apolitical efforts to promote
youth as consumers can spin out of control, as when Saudi Arabia
suspended publication of the youth-targeted daily newspaper Shams,
which was launched in 2005 and was circulated widely in Gulf
states, after it reprinted some of the cartoons of the prophet
Muhammad originally appearing in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten,
as part of an editorial critical of the paper’s action.
One of the
most significant signs of the mobilization of images of youth
as fun and youth consumption is the ubiquity of the “clips” (music
videos) on Arab satellite TV (and the Internet). As Walter Armbrust
shows, hostility to these video clips on the part of pundits
and commentators is as omnipresent as the clips themselves. According
to Armbrust, typical arguments are that video clips are a form
of Western cultural hegemony that “‘make Arab youth want to become
what they can never be’” (Palestinian poet Tamim Barghouthi)
and that undermine patriarchal society through the marketing
of sex, which “‘makes marriage increasingly difficult as a practical
course of action’” (Egyptian professor ‘Abd al-Wahhab al-Massiri).[13]

Sisters watch as an artisan prepares a personalized pendant
in the Hamidiyya souk, Damascus. (Kim Badawi/Redux) |
Mass consumption,
therefore, even when it involves local products, can also be
regarded as posing dangers to youth or producing “youth as trouble.”
One peril is said to be that Arab youth will be tantalized by
the offerings of global culture, yet unable to afford the commodities
of their dreams or get access to public spaces in which to enjoy
the pleasures associated with such products.
Limits
of Disaffection
The discourses
of the state, the mass media, pundits and professional commentators
tend, on the whole, to position Middle Eastern youth as lacking
in agency, needing protection and requiring the tutelage of state
institutions, experts and the nationalist intelligentsia. While
such discourses are correct in their understanding that youth
are in a position of dependency on their elders and the institutions
they control, what about youths’ own motivations and desires?
One of the
countries whose youth have received the most attention is Iran.
Roxanne Varzi, in her important ethnography on Iranian youth,
finds widespread disaffection for the ideology of the Islamic
Republic among the middle-class youth of northern Tehran. While
showing how such youth deploy various features of Western popular
culture in expressing their dissent, Varzi is careful to avoid
the trap of many Western observers who see such Iranian youth
as so intensely disaffected that they are all secular and Westernized.
Varzi demonstrates, on the contrary, that middle-class youth
have been molded by the Iranian state project of religiosity.
Religion is very much a part of their lives, and their expressions
of resistance, rather than being external to them. For instance,
one of the modes of disaffection is an embrace of what Varzi
labels “Sufi cool” by long-haired, bohemian Iranian youth. The
state has responded by producing its own brand of mystical pop
music in an effort to appropriate and compete with Islamic practices
outside its control.[14] In addition, young people in
the northern suburbs typically use Shi‘i religious rituals like
‘Ashura as occasions to mingle freely and publicly with the opposite
sex, turning such events into street parties. Similar things
occur at mulids (saints’ days) in Cairo, in this case,
among youth of working-class and lower middle-class backgrounds,
as depicted in Yousry Nasrallah’s 1995 documentary, On Boys,
Girls and the Veil.
Marc Schade-Poulsen’s
important ethnographic work in Oran, Algeria in the early 1990s
likewise avoids the errors made by many Western observers of
rai music, who tend to view it, like rock ‘n’ roll, as a youth-based
cultural movement striking blows against the puritanical and
conservative practices supported by an authoritarian state and
backward, intolerant religious mandarins. Schade-Poulsen demonstrates
that there is no inherent contradiction between listening to
rai music and being a believing Muslim, despite the violent antagonism
toward rai artists on the part of some militant Islamists. And
while rai music is associated with youth in Oran, it is by no
means exclusively consumed by them, but, in different ways, by
all generations, and especially, and collectively, at weddings.
Moreover, rai music is not “authored” by young musicians but
by older producers and established studio musicians, and is mostly
performed in nightclubs frequented by well-off adults, rather
than young people who have little disposable cash. For young
men in Oran, rai is not exactly “rebel music” à la punk or reggae;
rather, its lyrics represent a means by which they negotiate
the difficulties they face in meeting and dealing with young
women, at a time when women, as a result of modern education
and employment, wield more social power than in the past.[15]
Armbrust’s
examination of the discourses surrounding video clips likewise
demonstrates the importance of avoiding simplistic stereotypes
when it comes to youth culture and consumption. While many local
observers condemn the clips as corrupting, and Western observers
often view them as sticking it to the man (through depictions
of liberated sexuality), Armbrust shows that the reality is much
more complicated. The video flow includes not only the celebrated
(and maligned) gyrations of sexpots Haifa Wehbe and Elissa, but
also the “family values” clips of ‘Ali Gawhar and clips of the
massively popular Sami Yusuf, which use “pop” conventions to
articulate messages of Islamic piety and devotion.

Moroccan rappers Fati Show and DJ Dees rehearsing at a
Casablanca nightclub. (Thomas Vanhaute) |
All this suggests
the need for careful study of the daily lives of young people,
but also a caution against focusing on the spectacular or relying
overly upon Western models. A spate of articles and books, for
instance, has suggested that Iran’s young people are overwhelmingly
secular and thirsty for Western commodities and lifestyles. These
youth are believed to represent the best hope that Iran will
abandon its fundamentalist ways and rejoin the civilized community
of nations. An analytical focus on Iranian rappers and young
women wearing makeup and allowing their headscarves to slip to
reveal frosted hair obscures a more complicated reality. Young
volunteers man the paramilitary basij, which is on the
front lines of the Islamic Republic’s struggle against “immoral”
behavior, particularly on the part of privileged youth. This
is one indicator of the regime’s continued support among many
lower and working-class youth. Moreover, Iranian university students
may be disenchanted but they are essentially apolitical. They
are mostly concerned with quotidian goals such as landing a job
or getting admitted to graduate school. In fact, 150,000 Iranian
professionals leave the country each year, giving Iran one of
the highest rates of “brain drain” in the Middle East.[16]
Given the
severe limitations on youth incomes, the paucity of public spaces
for youth leisure and the nervousness on the part of authoritarian
states about congregations of young people, “oppositional” youth
movements are unlikely to take the same forms as youth subcultures
in the West. Other Western frames of analysis of youth, such
as the notion of the “generation gap,” can likewise be misleading.
As Varzi shows, for instance, secular youth in upscale precincts
of Tehran rely on the discretion and permission of their parents
when they organize private parties in their homes that sometimes
involve mixed-gender socializing, live music and consumption
of alcohol.[17] Claims that mass consumption and access to
the trappings of globalized youth culture will necessarily make
young people materialistic, individualistic, apolitical and lacking
in social consciousness are equally dubious. Palestinian youth
who have embraced rap music, for instance, have typically deployed
this art form to articulate fiercely nationalistic political
concerns. And Turkish youth, widely criticized for their selfish
consumerism, turned out to be at the forefront of relief efforts
in the wake of the Marmara earthquake of 1999.[18]
Liberators
in Trouble
The theme
of “youth as trouble” emerges most clearly—and the fears of Western
observers and Middle Eastern states converge—with regard to militant
Islamism, the supreme ill from which young people must be protected
(or else). In the minds of Westerners prone to “clash of civilizations”
thinking, the supposed susceptibility of Middle Eastern youth
to radical Islam is the factor that most calls into question
the belief that youth will set the region free. If not even the
new generation can be trusted to embrace “moderation”—acquiescence
in the US-sponsored liberal capitalist order—then there is no
hope of coexistence. In the words of Thomas Friedman, “Young
Israelis dream of being inventors, and their role models are
the Israeli innovators who made it to the Nasdaq. Hizballah youth
dream of being martyrs, and their role models are Islamic militants
who made it to the Next World.”[19] In the Middle East, the young may not be seen as irredeemable,
but they are no less at risk: The success of Muslim “extremists”
is often attributed to their ability to prey on youth, in particular,
underprivileged young men who are sexually frustrated due to
their inability to afford the costs of marriage. A paradigmatic
example of such representation in Egypt is the 1994 hit film The
Terrorist (al-Irhabi), in which the young terrorist
(played by the not so young ‘Adil Imam) is recruited when the
Islamist group promises him a wife in return for fulfilling an
assassination mission.
More broadly,
there is a tension in dominant discourses about youth between
seeing them as victims or perpetrators of violence. Consider
the great outrage and distress in the West over Palestinians’
“use” of children in the first year of the second intifada,
culminating in Palestinian spokespeople being forced to argue
that Palestinian mothers actually do love their children and
do not send them out to force the Israeli army to shoot them.
On the one hand, the denial of agency to the youngest stone throwers
allowed Westerners (and Israelis) to locate the cause of the
children’s victimhood in a flaw of Palestinian culture, rather
than the occupation. On the other hand, the older “stone-throwing
youths” of a thousand wire photos—having acquired agency by dint
of their age—were regarded as purveyors of violence, not victims.
This episode also serves as a reminder that, for Middle Eastern
states worried about their youth problem, the project of national
reproduction has always been managed within an international
arena of (Euro-American) expectation that judges the modernity
of other countries by how those deemed vulnerable are treated. The
category of the vulnerable in the Middle East includes women
and ethnic minorities (Jews, Berbers, Kurds), but also the young.
When Middle Eastern states are judged incompetent in their care
for youth, the response of the West may be to assert surrogate
parental rights of its own, intervening directly to save the madrasa-bound
boys and unschooled girls of Afghanistan, or encouraging the
students of Iranian universities to rebel against their elders.
In the post-September
11 era, indeed, the sheer numbers of Middle Eastern youth have
been cited as the Achilles’ heel of the existing non-democratic
order in the region. It has become a media truism, for instance,
that 60 percent of Iran’s population of 70 million
is less than 30 years of age, including a substantial cohort
born well after the 1979 revolution. This fact is frequently
adduced to imply that hardline clerical rule has no future.[20] In a sign that such hopes have not faded in Foggy Bottom, the
State Department has lately employed one Jared Cohen, 26, author
of Children of Jihad: A Young American’s Travels Among the
Youth of the Middle East, to advise its policy planning staff
on how to “divert the world’s impressionable youth away from
‘illicit actors.’” Cohen told a New Yorker profiler: “I
always say that the largest party in every country—the largest
opposition group in every country—is the youth party.”[21] Yet following the 2005 election
of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, which consolidated all the
branches of the Iranian government under conservative control,
Iranian youth have largely been relegated to the role of victim
in Western discourse. “Iran’s youth are as talented as young
Indians and Chinese, but they have no chance to show it,” the
ever quotable Friedman has lamented. “Iran has been reduced to
selling its natural resources to India and China—so Chinese and
Indian youth can invent the future, while Iran’s young people
are trapped in the past.”[22] It
is a short distance from this avuncular solicitude to the proposition
that Iranian youth could reclaim their agency—with a helpful
nudge from outside.
Youth in the
Middle East are burdened with authoritarian states, corruption
and nepotism that circumscribe their life chances, as well as
structural socio-economic crisis stemming from the failures of
state-led development and the systemic inequalities of global
capitalism. Not the least of their burdens, however, are the
expectations and imprecations generated by the “youth” of the
elite imagination. In the manner of youth everywhere, young Middle
Easterners can be expected to heed the paternalism of their governments
and the projections of outsiders unevenly at best, as they strive
to fulfill their own aspirations, whether they are emancipatory,
mundane or somewhere in between.
Author’s
Note: Thanks to Lori Allen, Arang Keshavarzian and Paul
Silverstein for their helpful and timely suggestions and comments.
Endnotes
[1] Washington
Post, November 1, 2007.
[2] Farzaneh
Roudi-Fahimi and Mary Mederios Kent, “Challenges and Opportunities:
The Population of the Middle East and North Africa,” Population
Bulletin 62/2 (June 2007), p. 15. Future generations can
expect to encounter different sorts of problems, given that the
birth rate in many Middle Eastern countries has declined significantly,
in some cases close to European levels.
[3] Roxanne
Varzi, Warring Souls: Youth, Media and Martyrdom in Post-Revolution
Iran (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2006), p. 11.
[4] Leyla
Neyzi, “Object or Subject? The Paradox of ‘Youth’ in Turkey,” International
Journal of Middle East Studies 33/3 (August 2001), p. 420.
[5] A
mild version of this argument appears in Galal Amin, Whatever
Happened to the Egyptians? (Cairo: Dar al-Hilal, 1998). [Arabic]
[6] Brian
Clark, “A Cupful of Pride,” Saudi Aramco World (September/October
1994).
[7] New
York Times, October 3, 2002.
[8] On
this process in Algeria, see Kamel Rarrbo, L’Algérie et sa
jeunesse: Marginalisations sociales et désarroi culturel (Paris:
Harmattan, 1995).
[9] Dick
Hebdige, Hiding in the Light (London: Routledge, 1998).
[10] Tim
Burrowes, “Middle Eastern Promise,” Campaign, May 26,
2006.
[11] Elliott
Colla and Chris Toensing, “Never Too Soon to Say Goodbye to Hi,” Middle
East Report Online (May 2003).
[12] Neyzi,
p. 424.
[13] See
Walter Armbrust, “What Would Sayyid Qutb Say? Some Reflections
on Video Clips,” Transnational Broadcasting Studies 14
(Spring 2005).
[14] Varzi,
pp. 21, 133, 136.
[15] Marc
Schade-Poulsen, Men and Popular Music in Algeria: The Social
Significance of Rai (Austin, TX: University of Texas Press,
1999).
[16] Kaveh
Basmenji, Tehran Blues: How Iranian Youth Rebelled Against
Iran’s Founding Fathers (London: Saqi Books, 2005), p. 316.
[17] Varzi,
p. 166.
[18] Neyzi,
p. 426.
[19] Thomas
Friedman, “Buffett and Hizballah’s Surprise War,” New York
Times, August 9, 2006.
[20] See,
for example, Christian Science Monitor, June 16, 2003.
[21] Jesse
Lichtenstein, “Condi’s Party Starter,” New Yorker, November
5, 2007.
[22] Thomas
Friedman, “A Shah with a Turban,” New York Times, December
23, 2005.

|