AUB publication delivers stimulating array of essays on Mideast topics

Published March 11th, 2009 - 01:39 GMT
Al Bawaba
Al Bawaba

AUB publication delivers stimulating array of essays on Mideast topics

 

The Faculty of Arts and Sciences at the American University of Beirut issued a new volume of its annual publication, Al-Abhath, a refereed journal which publishes articles and reviews in the fields of Arab and Middle Eastern studies.

The new 340-page volume consists of consists of 11 essays in English, two book reviews in English and one in Arabic, and four essays in Arabic on topics as diverse as religion, history, power, culture, poetry, economics, and environment.

"This volume brings together a constellation of eminent scholars and international authorities in the various ancient, classical, medieval, premodern, and modern aspects of the theme of, 'Civilizations: Clash or Concert?'," said journal editor Asaad Khairallah.

Most articles in the volume took a comparative approach while addressing a variety of topics.

Contributors included: Princeton Professor Glen Bowersock, who argued that religion "can foster coalescence rather than conflict; University of London Professor Felipe Fernandez-Armesto, who made a case for studying misunderstanding among cultures; AUB Professor Tarif Khalidi, who submitted a comparative study on the historian and Quran scholar at-Tabari; Penn State Professor Djelal Kadir discussed the fate of empires that have passed through Baghdad; Damascus University Professor Sadek Jalal Al-Azm addressed Islam and secular humanism, arguing that they are compatible; AUB Assistant Professor David Wrisley focused his study on identity construction against the background of crusader ideology; AUB Professor Abdul-Rahim Abu Husayn and Brown University Professor Engin deniz Akarli studied the complex interplay between general laws and communal law in Mount Lebannon, under Ottoman rule; University of London PhD candidate Dennis Kumetat studied arms and oil deals in interwar Iraq; Stephan Milich, a research assistant at the Center for Near- and Middle Eastern Studies in Germany, examined the works of Iraqi poet Saadi Yusuf, who lived in Western exile; Santa Cruz Professor Edmund Burke III warned of an imminent environmental crisis in the Middle East; Lebanese-American University Professor Samar Moujaes argued that while Orientalism introduced the East to the West, some of its adherents, such as Ernest Renan, also helped widen the gap between the two cultures; and finally, Columbia University Professor Muhsin al- Musawi addressed the relationship between Arab intellectuals and power and their failure to connect with the masses because of their elitist Western-influenced thought.