
New Books in Middle Eastern Studies Beth Derderian, "Art Capital: Museum Politics and the Making of the Louvre Abu Dhabi" (Stanford UP, 2026)
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Apr 3, 2026 Beth Derderian, Assistant Professor of Modern Middle East Studies and Anthropology at Brandeis, studies museums, art, and heritage in the Middle East. She discusses the Louvre Abu Dhabi as a case of museum franchising and market power. Short scenes and ethnography reveal shifting notions of good art, institutional growth in the UAE, and how capital reshapes representation and erases difference.
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Art Capital Means Multiple Capitals
- Art Capital refers both to Abu Dhabi as a political capital and the multiple forms of capital around art: social, cultural, and economic.
- The title intentionally puns on the $27 billion Saadiyat development and the cultural prestige the museums confer.
Use Immersive Episodes To Protect Sources
- Use immersive vignettes to present ethnographic findings while protecting interviewees.
- Derderian framed episodes around specific exhibitions so readers feel present before anonymized analysis follows.
Franchises Were Built Inside A Single Bureaucracy
- Early Saadiyat museum work was managed inside Abu Dhabi's culture ministry before brands spun into separate institutions.
- This centralized start shaped how distinct Western museum brands were produced under one Emirati administrative roof.


