`Particularly timely ... Lewis is the outstanding Western scholar in Islamic history and culture. These short, well-written essays underscore how different Islam is from the West.'
Forbes

`A rich account.'
International Herald Tribune

'Bernard Lewis's brilliant book of essays ... weaves a seamless web between past and present. In a collection of remarkable learning and range Mr. Lewis takes us ... from the early encounters of Christendom and Islam to today's Islamic dilemmas ... to be taken through a treacherous terrain by the coolest and most reassuring of guides. You are in the hands of the Islamic world's foremost living historian. Of that world's ordeal he writes with the greatest care and authority and no small measure of sympathy. The book's most engaging essay is a passionate defense of Orientalism that foreshadows today's debate about multi-culturalism and the study of non-Western history. With Mr. Lewis's rebuttal the debate is joined, as a great historian defends the meaning of scholarship and taken as those who would bully its practitioners in pursuit of some partisan truths. It is an unsentimental view of history that Mr. Lewis presents.'
Fouad Ajami, Wall Street Journal

Se alle

'As ever, Lewis speak with authority, in prose marked by lucidity, elegance, wit and force. His interpretation is informed by enormous erudition, by wonderful skill in shaping his narratives and analyses, and by a clear sense of his own values and premises. This is a challenging book that deserves a wide audience.'
R. New York Newsday

'a book of essays that gather his provocative thoughts on the subject'
Ron Grossman, Chicago Tribune

'he is well worth reading for the experience and erudition of his writing, and the refreshing lucidity of his style'
San Francisco Chronicle Review

'As the author of numerous books and articles on the Middle East, as a scholar of extraordinary erudition and a leading philologist, he is probably the best-known Orientalist in the English-speaking world.'
Washington Times

'Eleven superb essays on the culture clash between the Islamic nations of the Middle East and the more secularized West ... Scholarly but not pedantic, writing without fear or favor, Lewis makes an ideal guide through the political, religious, and cultural thickets of Islam ... his reach is as wide as his touch is sure. His tone is objective throughout ... A learned, forceful analysis that treats Islam with respect, not condescension.'
Kirkus Reviews

`Offer[s] perspectives that deserve to be seen outside specialist circles.'
Malise Ruthven, The Guardian

'His immense knowledge and meticulous attention to detail make these chapters a pleasure to read.'
Times Higher Education Supplement

`collection of erudite essays'
International Affairs

Islam and the West is a well-written and erudite book, affording many important insights on the history of cultural interaction between Europe and the Middle East.

Diplomatic History

Bernard Lewis's book Islam and the West could not have come at a more opportune time to answer some of the nagging questions and myths about Islam ... the author masterfully dwells on the biases and prejudices of both sides (Christian Europe and the Islamic world) which tend to put distance between the two worlds and civilizations ... The book is an excellent contribution to the understanding of the complex world of Islam. But, more importantly, it is a thoroughly researched and convincing analysis of the ebb and flow in the relationship between the two giant religious civilizations of the world, Christianity and Islam. It is recommended reading for students at the undergraduate and graduate level who want an insight into the dynamics of contemporary international affairs in the Middle East and the whole Euro-Arab world.

Nationalism and Ethnic Politics

Is it correct to equate Islam with the West, a religious community with a geo-political entity? Islam is not a place; it is a religion. But, in this enlightening and distinguished collection of essays, several of them previously unpublished in English, Bernard Lewis questions the apparent asymmetries between Islam and the West, explores the vast common heritage both communities share and investigates each side's perception of the other. Many of the pieces examine the troubled relations between the two regions since the Middle Ages, focusing in particular on the impact of the West on the Middle East in modern times, and the Islamic responses to Western dominance. Especially timely are articles on the resurgence of Islam and anti-Western sentiment in recent years and on the failure of democratic institutions to take hold in the region. Bernard Lewis is one of the world's leading scholars of the Middle East. He is Cleveland E. Dodge Professor of Near Eastern Studies, Emeritus, at Princeton University. Previously, a permanent member of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey.
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Lewis here collects his essays on the interaction of the Islamic world with the West. Dating back to the Middle Ages, this collection focuses in particular on each side's perception of the other, the impact of the West on the Middle East in modern times, and the Islamic responses to Western dominance.
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"Islam and the West is a well-written and erudite book, affording many important insights on the history of cultural interaction between Europe and the Middle East."--Diplomatic History "Demonstrate[s] breadth and depth of scholarship and an ability to communicate with both specialists and nonspecialists."--Journal of Ecumenical Studies "A valuable collection of essays and topics for introductory graduate seminars on Middle East politics."--Sandra Halperin, University of Pittsburgh "Lewis's scholarship is prodigious...He avoids dogmatic positions himself and sees dogma as something to be analyzed. It is this sense of nuance, of historical setting, of honesty to texts, that informs the essays in Islam and the West."--The New York Review of Books "Lewis speaks with authority, in prose marked by lucidity, elegance, wit and force...A challenging book that deserves a wide audience...Lewis writes with great force and clarity."--New York Newsday "Brilliant...weaves a seamless web between past and present. In collection of remarkable learning and range Mr. Lewis takes us, as he alone among today's historians and interpreters of Islam can, from the early encoutners of Christendom and Islam to today's Islamic dilemmas. To read Mr. Lewis on Europe's obsession with the Ottoman Turks, the raging battle between secularism and fundamentalism in the Muslim world, or the difficulty of studying other peoples' histories is to be taken through a treacherous terrain by the coolest and most reassuring of guides. You are in the hands of the Islamic world's foremost living historian. Of that world's ordeal he writes with the greatest care and authority and no small measure of sympathy."--Fouad Ajami, The Wall Street Journal "Mr. Lewis contrasts the Christian and Islamic civilizations and explains their interaction in war and peace, commerce and culture...Islam and the West is a primer for greater understanding of the countries engaged in cold and hot wars that, directly or indirectly, are rooted in religion."--The New York Times "A leading Islamicist, though sometimes a controversial one, Lewis here gathers some 11 essays that seek to 'open doors to the innermost domains of Islam.' There are long pieces on Gibbon, Edward Said's Orientalism, the trickiness of translating Arabic, and on the 'shi'a in Islamic history,' among other subjects. As the title suggests, the book's main thrust is one the encounter--all too grequently the clash--between Europe and the Middle East."--Washington Post "Provocative"--Chicago Tribune "Even when one disagrees with Lewis, he is well worth reading for the experience and erudition of his writing, and the refreshing lucidity of his style."--San Francisco Chronicle "A scholar who through industry and intellectual brilliance has achieved pre-eminence in his field."--Washington Times "Eleven superb essays on the culture clash between the Islamic nations of the Middle East and the more secularized West...Scholarly but not pedantic, writing without fear or favor, Lewis makes an ideal guide through the political, religious, and cultural thickets of Islam...A learned, forceful analysis that treats Islam with respect, not condescension."--Kirkus Reviews "Erudite...powerful and revealing. Everywhere in this book Mr. Lewis's commanding achievement is evident--his great learning, his deep knowledge of Arabic philology, his masterly acquaintance with the history and culture of the Middle East, and his intimate familiarity with the relations of East and West."--The New York Times Book Review "A very learned and thoughtful work. Lewis' comparative and synthetic approaches to the issues discussed are highly informative and worthy of careful reading by both specialists in the field(s) and lay readers."--Andrej Kreutz, Arab Studies Quarterly
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Bernard Lewis is the Cleveland E. Dodge Professor of Near Eastern Studies Emeritus, at Princeton University. His work has been translated in twenty-two languages, and he has lectured in Europe, Asia, North Africa, and America, and in many Muslim countries.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780195076196
Publisert
1993
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
558 gr
Høyde
242 mm
Bredde
161 mm
Dybde
20 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, P, UP, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
240

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Bernard Lewis is the Cleveland E. Dodge Professor of Near Eastern Studies Emeritus, at Princeton University. His work has been translated in twenty-two languages, and he has lectured in Europe, Asia, North Africa, and America, and in many Muslim countries.