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Saudi Enigma: A History [Kietas viršelis]

3.55/5 (21 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 272 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 28-May-2005
  • Leidėjas: Zed Books Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1842776045
  • ISBN-13: 9781842776049
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 272 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 28-May-2005
  • Leidėjas: Zed Books Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1842776045
  • ISBN-13: 9781842776049
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Despite speculation about Saudi interests and loyalties that have been directed at the country since 9/11, Arabia remains the key US ally in the Arab Middle East. M noret debunks the facile notions about Saudi society, and focuses our attention on present political and economic realities that cannot be reduced to essentialist "tribalist" ideas. M noret illustrates the emerging autonomous--and Islamic--manifestations of Saudi national identity, fiercely reformist rather than medieval, complex and varied rather than merely a justification or support for the rule of the al-Saud royal family. Underlying this account is a sophisticated economic history of the Saudi state, from the eighteenth century to the present day, which details all the alliances and manoeuvres that have brought the country and its rulers to their current precarious position.

Recenzijos

'Finally, we have a book by someone who has a robust social science approach to what is a modern and fast-changing society, who has lived in, and thought a lot about, the country, who does not fall into conspiracy theory, who avoids the anti-Saudi banalities of the outside world as much as the pieties of the regime, who, in a word, tells us how the country actually works.' Fred Halliday, London School of Economics

'A treasure-house of precise references and analyses, this book does not set out to provide simple answers, but to illustrate the great complexity of the country and to account for the deep changes it has gone through. Particularly enlightrening on the current crisis and the official response to it since 2002.' Sophie Pommier, Le Monde Diplomatique

'A historical and sociological analysis, a balance sheet that eschews illusions.' Francoise Crouigneau, Les Echos

'An astounding, lucid expose a useful antidote to the many shallow books on Saudia Arabia that have been published since 9/11. This is another example of writing exemplary social history, so different from the political myths devised both by the Saudi regime, its Western allies, and many scholars.' Paul Aarts co-editor of Saudi Arabia in the Balance: Political, Economy, Society, Foreign Policy

'A treasure-house of precise references and analyses, this book does not set out to provide simple answers, but to illustrate the great complexity of the country and to account for the deep changes it has gone through.' The Middle East

'A useful counter-narrative to populist Saudi-bashing'. The Economist

'Ménouret presents Saudi Arabia as a complex society governed by distinct but recognizable social forces, stripped of both glamour and mystique but conveyed with clarity and authority.' Jonathan Lindley, RUSI Journal

'A book by someone ... who, in a word, tells us how the country actually works ... This book does much to de-mystify it.' Journal of Third World Studies

'The Saudi Enigma is also notable for what it is not: it is not an essay of Riyadhology or court politics. In the wake of the Saudi succession, that may disappoint some, but this book is all the more illuminating for it.' RUSI Journal

Foreword xi
Professor Fred Halliday
Introduction 1(1)
Going beyond the logic of security
2(3)
Osama bin Laden and Saudi Arabia
5(4)
A suburb of the West
9(6)
PART I The construction of identities
The island of the Arabs
15(28)
The other country
15(3)
The fantasies of outside perception
18(7)
Contempt for history
25(3)
The abolition of geography
28(3)
An unattainable national identity?
31(2)
Bedouin and sedentary
33(3)
Sunnis and Shiites, Najd and periphery
36(3)
Modernity and tradition
39(4)
What is Wahhabism?
43(28)
The reforms of Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab
43(4)
The Najd revolution
47(5)
Saudis do not call themselves `Wahhabis'
52(3)
Wahhabism: a theologically false and diplomatically overdetermined concept
55(3)
National identity and insurrection
58(2)
Religion does not explain everything
60(3)
What globalization of Saudi Islam?
63(8)
PART II Powers and oppositions
Genesis and structure of the modern state, 1902-1973
71(31)
Islam and oil: two weak explanatory keys
71(2)
Najd: the Prussia of the Peninsula
73(2)
Was Arabia colonized?
75(3)
From Ottoman domination to the British demiurge
78(5)
Taking power through women
83(3)
Twilight of the Bedouins
86(6)
The founding alliance: Hijaz merchants and the Sauds
92(3)
Birth of a kingdom and a unified state administration
95(4)
`We are progressives by virtue of our Islam'
99(3)
Bellicose Islamism? 1973 - 2003
102(31)
The pitfalls of religious culturalism and economic determinism
102(3)
The deadly boom of 1973
105(2)
Modernization checked
107(3)
Retrograde Islamism?
110(4)
History of dissent
114(4)
Re-Islamization of an already Islamized space?
118(3)
Islamism, nationalism and anti-imperialism
121(3)
1992: reforms and repression
124(2)
Islam against traditions
126(7)
PART III Economy and society
From the era of opulence to the age of need
133(20)
What oil miracle?
135(3)
Imported growth and stagnation
138(4)
An industrial country?
142(2)
What macroeconomic strategies?
144(6)
Diversification and regionalization of the economy
150(3)
An ambiguous social modernization
153(20)
Islam and welfare?
153(4)
An urban civilization
157(5)
Atomized families
162(3)
The society of the poor
165(3)
The invention of tradition
168(5)
The appearance of women
173(16)
The nagging question of women's status
174(3)
Modern signs, traditional signs?
177(3)
The veil and Islam
180(3)
Emancipatory strategies
183(2)
The rise of an Islamic feminism
185(4)
The Gulf War generation
189(19)
The young old and the old young
190(3)
The founding event of the malaise
193(2)
A shipwrecked youth
195(2)
Does the educational system turn out terrorists?
197(4)
What reform of education?
201(3)
The re-Islamization of young people
204(4)
Conclusion
208(14)
The enduring subservience of the `ally of fifty years'
209(2)
Social history against political myths
211(4)
The Islamist movements: from the `Riyadh Spring' to reform from above
215(3)
The three sources of political society
218(4)
Chronology 222(6)
Notes 228(18)
Select bibliography 246(3)
Index 249


Pascal Ménoret, researcher and Arabist, developed a deep understanding of Saudi society during an extensive period in Riyadh, beginning a few days after September 11, 2001. He is the author of several publications in French on Saudi politics and society.