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The eleventh-century Muslim world was a great civilization while Europe lay slumbering in the Dark Ages. Slowly, inevitably, Europe and Islam came together, through trade and war, crusade and diplomacy. The ebb and flow between these two worlds for seven hundred years, illuminated here by a brilliant historian, is one of the great sagas of world history.
Full of rare and exact information.... A distinguished work.
More Reviews and RecommendationsThe Cleveland E. Dodge Professor of Near Eastern Studies Emeritus at Princeton University -- dubbed "the doyen of Middle Eastern studies," by The New York Times -- Islam expert Bernard Lewis has raised both awareness levels and eyebrows with topical bestsellers like What Went Wrong? and The Crisis of Islam.
More About the AuthorFull of rare and exact information.... A distinguished work.
Name:
Bernard Lewis
Current Home:
Princeton, New Jersey
Date of Birth:
May 31, 1916
Place of Birth:
London, England
Education:
B.A., University of London, 1936; Diplome des Etudes Semitiques, University of Paris, 1937; Ph.D., University of London,
Awards:
The Harvey Prize, 1978; National Endowment for the Humanities, 1990; Ataturk Peace Prize, 1998; George Polk Award, 2001
Bernard Lewis took some time to answer a few of our questions:
What was the book that most influenced your life -- and why?
A lot of books have influenced my life, but I suppose that the two that have had a consistent influence are the plays of Shakespeare and the Bible. I devoted a great deal of time to these books -- under constraint when I was a student, and by choice ever since. I am certainly more familiar with them than with any other.
What are your favorite books -- and why?
I must give a high place to Jane Austen's novels, and I would select two of them -- Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion -- two books that I like to refer to and dip into at random and always find both enjoyable and instructive.
Three books from the 18th century: One is Boswell's Life of Dr. Johnson. Another is Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. The third is a book I read many times when I was young and still go back to occasionally: Gulliver's Travels -- a rattling good yarn, and also a superb example of satirical self-criticism in Western civilization.
Two works of fiction dealing with the East: Rudyard Kipling's Kim is a superb and very sympathetic evocation of the sights and sounds and people of India, and J. J. Morier's Hajji Baba of Isfahan, a characterization of early-19th-century Iran so accurate that Persians long refused to believe that it was not translated from a Persian original.
Finally, some travel books about the East which I found particularly penetrating and accurate: A. W. Kinglake's Eothen and various books by Adolphus Slade.
What are you working on now?
A history of the Holy Land and a book on Islam and democracy.
| Preface to the 2001 Paperback Edition | 5 | |
| Preface | 11 | |
| I | Contact and Impact | 17 |
| II | The Muslim View of the World | 59 |
| III | On Language and Translation | 71 |
| IV | Media and Intermediaries | 89 |
| V | Muslim Scholarship about the West | 135 |
| VI | Religion | 171 |
| VII | The Economy: Perceptions and Contacts | 185 |
| VIII | Government and Justice | 201 |
| IX | Science and Technology | 221 |
| X | Cultural Life | 239 |
| XI | Social and Personal | 279 |
| XII | Conclusions | 295 |
| Notes | 309 | |
| Sources of Illustrations | 335 | |
| Index | 339 |
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