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The Multiple Identities of the Middle East 
  by Bernard Lewis 
                    
                    	
                    Paperback : 180 pages
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Introduction
(The Middle East is the birthplace of ancient civilizations, but most of the modern states that occupy its territory today are of recent origin, as are many key concepts of communal and individual identity and loyalty that the peoples of the region now confront. In The Multiple Identities of the Middle East, eminent Middle East historian Bernard Lewis elucidates the critical role of identity in the domestic, regional, and international tensions and conflicts of the Middle East today.
Examining religion, race and language, country, nation, and state, Lewis traces the rapid evolution of the identities of the Middle Eastern peoples, from the collapse of the centuries-old Ottoman Empire in 1918 to today's clash of old and new allegiances. He shows how, during the twentieth century, imported Western ideas such as liberalism, fascism, socialism, patriotism, and nationalism have transformed Middle Easterners' ancient notions of community, their self-perceptions, and their aspirations.
To this fascinating historical portrait, Lewis brings an understanding of the region and its peoples, as well as a profound sympathy for the plight that the modern world has imposed on them. The result is an invaluable tool in our understanding of an area that is of increasing global importance and concern today.
The Multiple Identities of the Middle East by Bernard  Lewis is a sharp diamond of a book. It cuts to the essence of how  identity has traditionally been experienced by people in the Middle  East, how Western political concepts have altered Middle-Eastern  notions of identity, and how these imported Western ideas have  inflamed political conflicts in that region. "The primary identities  are those acquired at birth," Lewis writes. The first determiner of  identity is blood, the second is place, and the third is religious  community, which for many is "the only loyalty that transcends local  and immediate bonds." Lewis adds, "The second broad category of  identity is that of allegiance to a ruler," and notes that these two  categories of identity were the only ones that existed until modern  times, when the Middle East came under the influence of Europe. Now,  he says, "a new kind [of identity] is evolving" between the two  traditional categories that existed before. This is "the freely chosen  cohesion and loyalty of voluntary associations, combining to form what  is nowadays known as the civil society." 
 In nine brief chapters  describing these various elements of identity, and the pain and  empowerment that has come from their revision, Lewis ranges widely  over the recent history of inter-Arab and Arab-Israeli conflicts. He  solves no problems with this book, but he does clarify them as well as  anyone has. The Multiple Identities of the Middle East is the  kind of book that can reframe a reader's entire orientation to a  subject, infusing one's perspective with empathy beyond anything an  outsider to the region could possibly muster on his or her  own. --Michael Joseph Gross
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