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  • Cited by 15
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
August 2012
Print publication year:
2002
Online ISBN:
9780511550379

Book description

The Middle East has changed clearly, substantially, and dramatically during the last decade. Yet scholarly and public understanding lags far behind these events. This book explains why the previous era came to end, giving an historical and political summation of the region. Three interlinked themes are crucial to the book. First, a reinterpretation of the era of upheaval the Middle East has just passed through. During that period, many Arabs believed that some leader, country, or radical movement would unite the region, solving all its problems. Second, an evaluation of how the historical experience of the period between the 1940s and the 1990s undermined the old system, making change necessary. Third, an analysis of the region today that helps explain future developments, in what the author terms the Era of Reluctant Pragmatism, as the Middle Eastern societies decide their relationships to the West.

Reviews

‘Drawing on his decades of researching the region and his 18 earlier books, Rubin has produced a magisterial overview of the contemporary Middle East. Highly recommended.’

Source: Choice

‘Powerfully persuasive. All academic libraries and large public libraries should quickly add this cogent, troubling and inexpensive monograph to their collections.’

Source: Catholic Library World

‘… an important, spirited, mature meditation on the historical baggage of the modern Middle East.’

Fouad Ajami - The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, The Johns Hopkins University

‘… brilliant …’

Source: Middle East Quarterly

‘The Tragedy of the Middle East could be the political book most hated by Arabs since Rafael Patai's The Arab Mind in 1973...the book is a powerful one.’

Source: The Washington Post

‘Barry Rubin has written an important, spirited, mature meditation on the historical baggage of the modern Middle East. It asks the right questions about what ails modern Middle East societies. It has sweep and thoroughness. It is not severe in tone, more resigned than judgmental … I find in it a fine balance between concrete, specific data and wider theoretical concerns about politics and culture. Dr Rubin is a prolific author with wide experience, and this book draws on the work and judgment of a seasoned scholar. Free of jargon, written with considerable clarity and force, this book will earn its place and make its way in the current debate about the ordeal of modernity in that tormented region. Its chapters on anti-Americanism and the 'uncivil society' are quite smart and go against the conventional wisdom. This is an engaging book by an engaged author who really cares about his material and his subject.’

Fouad Ajami - The John Hopkins University

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