The tragedy of the Middle East

Bibliographic Information

The tragedy of the Middle East

Barry Rubin

Cambridge University Press, 2002

  • : pbk

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

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.

Table of Contents

  • 1. The triumph of the 'old Middle East'
  • 2. Paradigm lost
  • 3. The regime's success, the nation's disaster
  • 4. Syria, the test case for reform
  • 5. Iran: the people versus the will of God?
  • 6. Force and violence in Middle East politics
  • 7. The battle for the soul of Islam
  • 8. The Arab-Israeli conflict: foundation stone or millstone?
  • 9. The political uses of anti-Americanism
  • 10. The uncivil society and the wall of lies.

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