From Library Journal
Few recent titles on the Middle East and Islam can match the readability, comprehensiveness, and analysis in this wonderfully lucid and culturally absorbing book, first published in 1985 and now revised and expanded to incorporate the political, economic, and social changes since then. The authors, who are Middle East experts (Univ. of Texas, Austin), first encountered the Arab world over 40 years ago. Their cultural insight could be obtained only by decades of studying and living in various Arab countries. They intertwine their personal stories with astute observations and commentaries to produce a powerful and enormously enjoyable book for anybody who desires a better understanding of the Arab peoples. Highly recommended.?Nader Entessar, Spring Hill Coll., Mobile, Ala.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From the Publisher
In the ten years since Anchor first published Elizabeth and Robert Fernea's award-winning
The Arab World: Personal Encounters, vast political and economic shifts have taken place: the end of the Iran/Iraq War and the Lebanese civil war; the outbreak of the Gulf War; the historic 1993 peace accords between Israel and the Palestinians, to name just a few. Which is why the Ferneas, leading scholars in Middle Eastern studies, felt a need to return to the same towns and cities they had written about previously-to see how these changes had affected the region and the people who live in it.
The authors reveal the human face of the Arab World as they revisit and talk with newsmakers and colleagues, old friends and new. Their forty years of experience in the region help illuminate the human consequences of changes all too often discussed in abstractions and generalizations: the military conflicts, new urbanization, labor migration, religious revival, as well as radical changes in the roles of men, women, and the family. With new chapters on Baghdad, Beirut, Amman, Jerusalem, Marrakech, and Cairo, this new edition of The Arab World will strengthen its reputation as a book "which should be required reading for anyone with a serious interest in the Middle East" (The Washington Report on Middle East Affairs).