audience listening to lecture

2018 Walter A. Strauss Lecture Series—“The Defense of Inhumanity: Interwar Air Control and the British Idea of Arabia”

Priya Satia, professor of modern English history at Stanford University, will give three lectures at Case Western Reserve University for the 2018 Walter A. Strauss Lecture Series, hosted by the Baker-Nord Center for the Humanities.

In each of her three lectures, Satia will explore how people with conscience have committed unconscionable acts in the modern period.

Her second lecture, titled “The Defense of Inhumanity: Interwar Air Control and the British Idea of Arabia,” will take place Wednesday, Sept. 19, from 5 to 6 p.m. in Tinkham Veale University Center, Ballroom A.

About the talk

In this lecture, Satia will take up the question of aerial control, a military surveillance system the British invented in Iraq between the world wars. This regime was the brainchild of a group of British officials professing deep understanding and even love for the region.

Satia will show how particular cultural perceptions of the region and its inhabitants enabled those officials to reconcile their genuine ethical scruples with the actual violence of aerial control—and their enduring influence on military thinking about the region today.

About the series

In some ways, the “modernity” of the modern period lies precisely in the growing awareness of conscience as an ethical rather than religious quality—a new self-consciousness about conscience. This understanding of conscience was tied to the modern historical sensibility; it depended on a sense of how much agency, and thus responsibility, humans have in shaping their world and their lives.

Satia will examine this phenomenon in three lectures covering key moments in the history of the British Empire:

  • The question of a Quaker gun-maker’s conscience in the period of the Industrial Revolution;
  • The way British officials professing deep understanding and love for the Middle East invented a violent regime of aerial policing there during World War I; and
  • How the violence among neighbors during decolonization in postwar South Asia weighed on the conscience of all those involved.

Together, these case studies enable exploration of the well-meaning yet destructive nature of modern imperialism itself.

As part of the series, Satia will present:

  • “Pacifists Making Guns: The Galton Family and Britain’s Industrial Revolution”Monday, Sept. 17, from 5 to 6 p.m. in Tinkham Veale University Center, Ballroom A;
  • “The Defense of Inhumanity: Interwar Air Control and the British Idea of Arabia” Wednesday, Sept. 19, from 5 to 5:45 p.m. in Tinkham Veale University Center, Ballroom A; and
  • “The Self Divided: The Partition of 1947” Friday, Sept. 21, from 5 to 6 p.m. in Tinkham Veale University Center, Ballroom A.

This lecture series, in memory of Walter A. Strauss (1923-2008), who was the Elizabeth and William T. Treuhaft Professor of Humanities, is generously supported by funds provided by the Paul Wurzburger Endowment.

All three events are free and open to the public. Learn more about and register for the events.