Each Part end with Suggested Readings. Vignettes and maps Preface
Acknowledgments
A Note on Transliteration New to this Edition Introduction PART I.
THE ADVENT OF THE MODERN AGE Chapter 1. From Late Antiquity to the
Dawn of a New Age Chapter 2. Gunpowder Empires Chapter 3. The
Middle East and the Modern World System Chapter 4. War, Diplomacy,
and the New Global Balance of Power Documents Evliya Chelebi:
Seyahatanamé(1) Evliya Chelebi: Seyahatanamé (2) Draft Treaty of
Amity and Commerce between the Ottoman Empire and France, February
1535 The Travels of Sir John Chardin into Persia and the
East-Indies (1) The Travels of Sir John Chardin into Persia and the
East-Indies (2) PART II. THE QUESTION OF MODERNITY
Chapter 5. Defensive Developmentalism Chapter 6. Imperialism
Chapter 7. Wasif Jawhariyyeh and the Great Nineteenth-Century
Transformation Photo Essay: The Great Nineteenth-Century
Transformation and Its Aftermath Chapter 8. The Life of the Mind
Chapter 9. Secularism and Modernity Chapter 10. Constitutionalism
Documents Commercial Convention (Balta Liman): Britain and the
Ottoman Empire The Hatt-i Sharif of Gulhane The Islahat Fermani The
d'Arcy Oil Concession Algeria: The Poetry of Loss Huda Shaarawi: A
New Mentor and Her Salon for Women Rifaca Rafic al-Tahtawi: The
Extraction of Gold or an Overview of Paris Muhammad cAbduh: The
Theology of Unity Namik Kemal: Extract from the Journal H:urriyet
The Supplementary Fundamental Law of 7 October 1907 PART III. WORLD
WAR I AND THE MIDDLE EAST STATE SYSTEM Chapter 11. State-Building
by Decree Chapter 12. State-Building by Revolution and Conquest
Chapter 13. The Invention and Spread of Nationalisms
Chapter 14. The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Documents An Arab
Soldier in the Ottoman Army Resolution of the Syrian General
Congress at Damascus, 2 July 1919
Theodor Herzl: A Solution of the Jewish Question The Balfour
Declaration, 2 November 1917 Mahmud Darwish: Eleven Planets in the
Last Andalusian Sky PART IV. THE CONTEMPORARY ERA Chapter 15. The
Autocratic State Chapter 16. Oil Chapter 17. The United States and
the Middle East Chapter 18. Resistance Conclusion. A New Middle
East?
Documents Speech Delivered by President Gamal cAbd al-Nasser at
Port-Said on the Occasion of Victory Day on 23 December 1961
Zakaria Tamer: Tigers on the Tenth Day Ali Shariati: The Philosophy
of History: The Story of Cain and Abel Ayatollah Khomeini: Islamic
Government Sayyid Qutb: Milestones "Statement of the April 6
Movement Regarding the Demands of the Youth and the Refusal to
Negotiate with Any Side" Yassir al-Manawahly: "The International
Monetary Fund" Timeline Biographical Sketches Glossary Credits
Index
James L. Gelvin is Professor of History at the University of
California, Los Angeles. An award-winning teacher, he is the author
of The New Middle East: What Everyone Needs to Know (2017), The
Arab Uprisings: What Everyone Needs to Know (2015), The
Israel-Palestine Conflict: One Hundred Years of War (2014), Divided
Loyalties: Nationalism and Mass Politics in Syria at the Close of
Empire (1999), and numerous
shorter works. He is also coeditor of Global Muslims in the Age of
Steam and Print (2013).
"This is without question the best survey of modern Middle Eastern
history currently available in English. It is comprehensive, lucid,
nuanced, and up to date, but it is also a good read--very well
written and entirely accessible to students and general readers
alike. I recommend it without hesitation to anyone who wants to
acquire a solid understanding of the history of this region from
the late Ottoman period onward, and it's a must-read for people who
really
want to make sense of what is going on in this region
today."--Zachary Lockman, New York University
"Gelvin's book is among the very best overviews of the modern
Middle East. Its great virtue is that he lets readers in on the
really exciting thing about this history--the debate over what has
driven the region's dramatic developments. He is also attentive to
the history of social classes--beyond just the political elite--and
to that of major social movements. It is an essential text for our
time."--Juan Cole, University of Michigan
"The Modern Middle East is by far the best textbook for
introductory and survey courses. In a humorous and conversational
style, it offers a substantial analytical and interpretive
framework, not just a litany of dry facts that most students will
likely forget after their exams. The book accomplishes two
objectives at once: it teaches students how to think about history
and it introduces them to many of the key issues of the modern
Middle East."--Joel
Beinin, Stanford University
"James Gelvin's The Modern Middle East: A History is an excellent
introductory text on the history of the Middle East. Through a
lively, well-written narrative, Gelvin emphasizes that the Middle
East today cannot be understood without looking at the social,
economic, cultural, and political history of the region beginning
in the seventeenth century. The work also stresses that the history
of the Middle East needs to be understood within the global
context of the emergence of nation-states, the development of the
global economy, and imperialism. Students will benefit from the
variety of methodologies used by the author and they will
experience each era
firsthand through well-chosen primary sources."--Robert Bond,
MiraCosta College
"The Modern Middle East: A History provides an accessible, engaging
history of the region. Its real strength is its ability to render
the region's complicated history accessible to a population of
undergraduates, most of them born as the most recent spate of
American wars in the region began."--Nova Robinson, Seattle
University
The Modern Middle East: A History is the best in its genre. Its
primary strengths include its breadth, its analytical investments
and sharpness, and the simplicity and accessibility of its
prose."--Charles Anderson, Western Washington University
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