Culture and Conflict in the Middle East by Philip Carl Salzman

BUY IT NEW

  • $34.95 Online price
  • $27.96 Member price
  • Join Now
  • skip to cart
  • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=9781591025870&productCode=BK&maxCount=100&threshold=3

Usually ships within 2-3 days

Get It There On Time
Holiday Delivery Schedule

FIND & RESERVE AN IN-STORE COPY

Enter a zip code

(Hardcover)

  • Publisher: Prometheus Books
  • Pub. Date: March 2008
  • ISBN-13: 9781591025870
  • Sales Rank: 62,672
  • 224pp
 
  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Features
  • Full Product Details

Synopsis

In an era of increasing interaction between the United States and the countries of the Middle East, it has become ever more important for Americans to understand the social forces that shape Middle Eastern cultures. Based on years of his own field research and the ethnographic reports of other scholars, anthropologist Philip Carl Salzman presents an incisive analysis of Middle Eastern culture that goes a long way toward explaining the gulf between Western and Middle Eastern cultural perspectives.
Salzman focuses on two basic principles of tribal organization that have become central principles of Middle Eastern life-balanced opposition (each group of whatever size and scope is opposed by a group of equal size and scope) and affiliation solidarity (always support those closer against those more distant). On the positive side, these pervasive structural principles support a decentralized social and political system based upon individual independence, autonomy, liberty, equality, and responsibility. But on the negative side, Salzman notes a pattern of contingent partisan loyalties, which results in an inbred orientation favoring particularism: an attitude of my tribe against the other tribe, my ethnic group against the different ethnic group, my religious community against another religious community. For each affiliation, there is always an enemy.
Salzman argues that the particularism of Middle Eastern culture precludes universalism, rule of law, and constitutionalism, which all involve the measuring of actions against general criteria, irrespective of the affiliation of the particular actors. The result of this relentless partisan framework of thought has been the apparentlyunending conflict, both internal and external, that characterizes the modern Middle East.

More Reviews and Recommendations

Biography

Philip Carl Salzman (Montreal, Canada) is professor of anthropology at McGill University; the founding chair of the Commission on Nomadic Peoples of the International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences; the founding editor of Nomadic Peoples; and the author of Black Tents of Baluchistan; Pastoralism: Equality, Hierarchy, and the State; Thinking Anthropologically; and Understanding Culture.

Customer Reviews

  • Reader Rating:
Be the first to write a review!