1. Slavery
2. Race
3. Islam in Arabia
4. Prejudice and Piety, Literature and Law
5. Conquest and Enslavement
6. Ventures in Ethnology
7. The Discovery of Africa
8. In Black and White
9. Slaves in Arms
10. The Nineteenth Century and After
11. Abolition
12. Equality and Marriage
13. Image and Stereotype
14. Myth and Reality
Notes
Documents
Sources of Illustrations
Index
Bernard Lewis is Cleveland E. Dodge Professor of Near Eastern Studies Emeritus at Princeton University. He is the author of several books, including The Muslim Discovery of Europe, The Assassins, and The Political Language of Islam.
"A realistic, well-documented study. Important illustrations and
primary evidence now made accessible."--Irving R. Mix, Elmira
College
"An important book which explains the issue of slavery in the
Middle East."--Robert A. Hess, Messiah College
"An excellent and timely work on an important and rather neglected
issue."--Ehsan Yarshater, Columbia University
"Splendid--should supplant all previous discussions."--Paul A.
Rahe, University of Tulsa
"A splendid discussion of a difficult subject."--Paul A. Rahe,
University of Tulsa
"Deceptively brief, delightfully easy to read, and beautifully
illustrated."--Journal of Interdisciplinary History
"Bernard Lewis an exceptionally distinguished historian of the
Middle Eastern world....[A]uthoritative addresses to reality like
his will serve excellently instead, and they make him a matchless
guide to the background of Middle East conflict today."--David
Pryce-Jones, Commentary
"[A] pioneering work."--David Warren Bowen, Magill's Literary
Annual
"Highly readable."--The New York Review of Books
"This book will foster Bernard Lewis's reputation as the doyen of
Middle Eastern studies."--The New York Times Book Review
"Mr. Lewis's knowledge of Islamic history, literature, and
jurisprudence is so detailed, expansive, and profoundly integrated
that it is enough for him to merely refer to a period or an
instance to be able to envision the entire context."--The
Washington Times
"His scholarship must be respected...He skillfully sets up and
explicates the primary paradoxes of the Islamic view of slavery and
of race...[A book] that surely should be read."--Journal of Social
History
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