
New Books in Middle Eastern Studies Fahad Ahmad Bishara, "Monsoon Voyagers: An Indian Ocean History" (U California Press, 2025)
Nov 27, 2025
Fahad Ahmad Bishara, an Associate Professor of History specializing in Gulf and Indian Ocean studies, dives into his book, Monsoon Voyagers. He examines the 1924 journey of the Al-A‘waj, exploring the significance of trade routes, debt agreements, and piracy. Bishara discusses how maritime law shaped interactions and the role of communication in the Arab diaspora. He also reflects on the persistent legacy of dhow trading into the mid-20th century, revealing the ongoing impact of these historical maritime practices on contemporary Gulf and Indian societies.
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Gulf History On An Oceanic Scale
- Fahad Ahmad Bishara reframes Gulf history as part of the Indian Ocean, not just the Middle East.
- He uses local family archives to reveal merchants' oceanic networks and concepts.
Using A Captain's Log And Family Papers
- The book draws heavily on a ship captain's logbook and Kuwait family archives.
- These materials include ledgers, maps, contracts, and mercantile correspondence used as primary evidence.
Dhows Measured By Date Baskets
- 'Dhow' covers many vessel types; deep-sea baghlas or booms were 150–200 date-basket capacity.
- These ships measured capacity in date baskets and carried crews of roughly a dozen plus passengers.



