"A foundational text for the subfields of literary anthropology and the anthropology of women in the Middle East."
Journal of Anthropological Research
"<i>Veiled Sentiments</i> is an excellent study, thorough, meticulous, and stimulating, of the highly complex social system of these tribes, with particular emphasis on male-female relationships and on the intriguing, often paradoxical roles played by men and women to preserve this system."
Arab Studies Quarterly
"This book is a beautiful account of a lifetime of shared <i>‘ishra</i> or moments between Abu-Lughod and the Awald ‘Ali Bedouins. Anthropology often looks at “the other”, but by representing the emotional dialectics between the informant and the researcher over time, what this book reveals is the impact fieldwork has on the anthropologist."
Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford
"The republication makes an important classic study better available for new generations of readers and offers some new material for those already familiar with it, as well as providing the author’s own commentary on her earlier work."
Islam and Christian–Muslim Relations
A Note on Transcriptions
One: Guest and Daughter
The Community
Fieldwork
Poetry and Sentiment
PART ONE
The Ideology of Bedouin Social Life
Two: Identity in Relationship
Asl: The Blood of Ancestry
Garaba: The Blood of Relationship
Maternal Ties and a Common Life
Identification and Sharing
Identity in a Changing World
Three: Honor and the Virtues of Autonomy
Autonomy and Hierarchy
The Family Model of Hierarchy
Honor: The Moral Basis of Hierarchy
Limits on Power
Hasham: Honor of the Weak
Four: Modesty, Gender, and Sexuality
Gender Ideology and Hierarchy
The Social Value of Male and Female
The "Natural" Bases of Female Moral
Inferiority
Red Belts and Black Veils: The Symbolism of Gender and Sexuality
Sexuality and the Social Order
Hasham Reconsidered: Deference and the Denial of Sexuality
The Meaning of Veiling
PART TWO
Discourses on Sentiment
Five: The Poetry of Personal Life
On Poetry in Context
The Poetry of Self and Sentiment
Six: Honor and Poetic Vulnerability
Discourses on Loss
Matters of Pride
Responding to Death
The Discourse of Honor
Seven: Modesty and the Poetry of Love
Discourses on Love
Star–Crossed Lovers
An Arranged Marriage
Marriage, Divorce, and Polygyny
Eight: Ideology and the Politics of Sentiment
The Social Contexts of Discourse
Protective Veils of Form
The Meaning of Poetry
The Politics of Sentiment
Ideology and Experience
Ethnography's Values: An Afterword
Appendix: Formulas and Themes of the Ghinnawa
Notes
Bibliography
Index
“A brilliant study of moral constraint and personal expression. . . . Detailed, immediate, and superbly composed. . . . Some books extend discussions, others launch them. This is one of the latter.”—Clifford Geertz
“A truly extraordinary book—beautifully and modestly written, remarkably insightful, consistently compelling.”—Edward Said