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Syrian Episodes: Sons, Fathers, and an Anthropologist in Aleppo
 
 
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Syrian Episodes: Sons, Fathers, and an Anthropologist in Aleppo [Hardcover]

John Borneman (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0691128871 978-0691128870 February 26, 2007

When Princeton anthropologist John Borneman arrived in Syria's second-largest city in 2004 as a visiting Fulbright professor, he took up residence in what many consider a "rogue state" on the frontline of a "clash of civilizations" between the Orient and the West. Hoping to understand intimate interactions of religious, political, and familial authority in this secular republic, Borneman spent much time among different men, observing and becoming part of their everyday lives. Syrian Episodes is the striking result.

Recounting his experience of living in Aleppo's ancient marketplace and lecturing at its modern university, he offers deft, first-person stories of the longings and discontents expressed by Syrian sons and fathers. Combining literary imagination and anthropological insight, the book's discrete narratives converge in an unforgettable portrait of contemporary culture in Aleppo.

We read of romantic seductions, rumors of spying, the play of light in rooms, the bargaining of tourists in bazaars, and an attack of wild dogs. With unflinching honesty and frequent humor, Borneman describes his encounters with students and teachers, customers and merchants, and women and families, many of whom are as intrigued with the anthropologist as he is with them. Refusing to patronize those he meets or to minimize his differences with them, Borneman provokes his interlocutors, teasing out unexpected confidences, comic responses, and mutual misunderstandings. He engages the curiosity and desire of encounter and the possibility of ethical conduct that is willing to expose cultural differences.

Syrian Episodes is a sophisticated exploration--precise, vivid, ironic--of the predicaments of Arabs in a contemporary world.



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Editorial Reviews

Review


First of all, the book is gorgeously written. Second, it is the anthropology of experience rather than the anthropology of abstruse theory. -- Martin Peretz, New Republic



Vivid detail fills Syrian Episodes, a book startling in its frankness about the Princeton professor's friendly, frustrating, and even flirtatious encounters in Syria's second-largest city. . . . The author fulfills his early promise of an ethnography that is as much about others' questions as his own. Both intrigue the reader as one reads conversations about subjects as varied as God, sex, movies, George W. Bush, and the Ba'ath Party. Drawing on his experiences at the souk, and the university, Mr. Borneman tells the stories of young men, some oppressed by paternal authority, some adrift without it. -- Nina C. Ayoub, The Chronicle of Higher Education



Readers who are nostalgic for the orientalist tradition of encounters with the exotic other would enjoy this book, particularly given the accessible narrative style in which it is written. -- Faedah M. Totah, H-NET Reviews

From the Inside Flap


"Syrian Episodes, a novel and seductive mix of conversation, description, and interpretation, radiates happily from the small to the big picture. The dynamics of desire-of mutual attraction fueled by difference; of buying, selling, and collecting; of eating, living, teaching, and traveling in a new environment-structure each of the book's episodes. It doesn't avoid the anguish and risks of encountering people and persuading them to accept us. Simply put, Syrian Episodes comes at a good time to help give shape to an anthropology that posits human encounters as a rich source of knowledge that the reading of texts, no matter how sophisticated, can't provide."--Abdellah Hammoudi, author of A Season in Mecca

"John Borneman's Syrian Episodes is an exquisite and compulsively readable account of a picaresque sojourn in Aleppo, Syria. The book raises the nervous matter of experience in anthropology, troubles the bad faith of much ethnographic intention, and develops an approach that refuses to patronize. This is one of the more exciting--and ethically and intellectually demanding--works of anthropology that I have read in years, and also among the most beautiful. There is no other book like it."--Lawrence Cohen, University of California, Berkeley



Product Details

  • Hardcover: 268 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press (February 26, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0691128871
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691128870
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.5 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #660,327 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Original, Insightful, and Beautifully Written!, December 11, 2007
By 
Dr. T (New York City) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Syrian Episodes: Sons, Fathers, and an Anthropologist in Aleppo (Hardcover)
This is truly a superb book. A must for all those interested in Syria, the Middle East, Islam, and the encounter with other. John Borneman is a keen observer and an original reader of his surrounding. The book consists of a series of encounters that take place during his stay in Aleppo, one of the most ancient and sophisticated city in the Arab world (Syria). Borneman analyzes social interactions, focusing on the relation between politics, economics, family relations, and sexual desire. All come together in this beautifully written book that transports us to a different world while enabling us to see and understand it. This work is for those who are willing to accompany the anthropologist on his quest for meaning as he meanders through cultural difference and the various subtleties that provide a place and a people with their identity. The book is thoroughly self-reflexive, constantly interrogating the limits of knowledge while keenly reproducing fascinating encounters that place us at the center of the experience.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Informative... a much needed approach, October 25, 2008
This review is from: Syrian Episodes: Sons, Fathers, and an Anthropologist in Aleppo (Hardcover)
An anthropological study of Aleppo is such a novelty that I could not wait to get my hands on the book.
The preface is a quick introduction to the modern Syrian political and cultural scene with a couple of useful analytical insights on how an anthropologist/ethnographer approaches his subjects : "...how in our encounters, do expectations and counterexpectations shape the questions we ask each other and the dynamics of our interaction?"
This and similar methodological and analytical questions should be kept in mind as one starts reading the Episodes themselves....otherwise, one runs the risk of being caught in a series of interactions which though entertaining at times, they become at some point superficial and pointless unless tightly framed within the research project of the author.
The coda is excellent in pulling together the material anew, giving sense and extracting meaning from the scattered episodes.
The author repeatedly stresses the necessity for the anthropologist to maintain ambiguity in the interpersonal encounter to allow for the unfolding of an unscripted interaction and he does practice that ambiguity. On another level, one is never completely in control of the elements one is projecting in the encounter, the author's polymorphous gender orientation may very well have been projected outside his own volition and must have in fact affected the way his interactions proceeded.
Although hinted at here and there, I missed a deeper analysis of the meaning of the author's foreigness/otherness in those encounters. Placed as the Episodes are against the backdrop of the American war in Iraq, the author favored the analysis of the meaning of his Americannness, as an assertive dominant otherness, in the encounters, over the meaning of his Otherness/Foreigness on every level- from physical to intellectual and religious- which in my assesment, affects the encounter with men and women from the Muslim culture- be they practicing Muslims or non-Muslims-very deeply and is revealed only to the experienced eye.
In all, well worth-reading.
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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Mixed feelings about this book, September 3, 2009
This review is from: Syrian Episodes: Sons, Fathers, and an Anthropologist in Aleppo (Hardcover)
It appears that many people, espcially those in the academic world thought highly of this book, however I didn't like Borneman's approach to his study. He was too biased by his homosexuality to objectively evaluate his research. Many of his encounters had inferences of sexuality. His conclusions about a son's reliance on his father were very thought-provoking both in terms of individual relationships and the relationship of Syrians to their leader Assad, but he put too much about himself and his feelings in the book. The book would have been much better if he had kept his personal sexual life out of it.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Summer days are long, noisy, exhausting, and at the end of each I often feel as old as the souk itself, inevitably covered head to foot with a thin coat of dust. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
residency permit, baba ghanoush
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, Aleppo University, Ba'ath Party, Middle East, Ministry of Education, The Wrap, University of Aleppo, Grand Mosque, Hammam Nahasin, New Yorker, Abu Ghraib, Silk Road, Sissy House, Sunni Muslim, The Show, Forrest Gump, Muslim Brotherhood
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