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| Author | Bernard Lewis | 
|---|---|
| Country | United States | 
| Language | English | 
| Subject | Middle East and the Islamic world | 
| Genre | Islamic history | 
| Publisher | Oxford University Press | 
Publication date  | May 2, 2004 | 
| Media type | Print (Hardcover, Paperback), E-book | 
| Pages | 456 | 
| ISBN | 978-0195173369 | 
| OCLC | 1171225675 | 
From Babel to Dragomans: Interpreting the Middle East is a 2004 book written by Middle-East historian Bernard Lewis. The book comprises a series of scholarly essays and speeches given by Lewis over a period of four decades on the topic of the Middle East and the Islamic world.[1][2][3][4]
Contents
- Chapter 1 : An Islamic mosque
 - Chapter 2 : From Babel to Dragomans
 - Chapter 3 : Middle East feasts
 - Chapter 4 : Iran in history
 - Chapter 5 : Palimpsests of Jewish history : Christian, Muslim and secular diaspora
 - Chapter 6 : Some notes on land, money and power in medieval Islam
 - Chapter 7 : An interpretation of Fatimid history
 - Chapter 8 : Propaganda in the pre-modern Middle East : a preliminary classification
 - Chapter 9 : Monarchy in the Middle East
 - Chapter 10 : Religion and murder in the Middle East
 - Chapter 11 : The Mughals and the Ottomans
 - Chapter 12 : Europe and the Turks : the civilization of the Ottoman empire
 - Chapter 13 : Europe and Islam : Muslim perceptions and experience
 - Chapter 14 : Cold war and detente in the sixteenth century
 - Chapter 15 : From pilgrims to tourists : a survey of Middle Eastern travel
 - Chapter 16 : The British mandate for Palestine in historical perspective
 - Chapter 17 : Pan-Arabism
 - Chapter 18 : The emergence of modern Israel
 - Chapter 19 : Orientalist notes on the Soviet-United Arab Republic Treaty of 27 May 1971
 - Chapter 20 : A taxonomy of group hatred
 - Chapter 21 : Islam and the West
 - Chapter 22 : The Middle East, westernized despite itself
 - Chapter 23 : The Middle East in world affairs
 - Chapter 24 : Friends and enemies : reflections after a war
 - Chapter 25 : Return to Cairo
 - Chapter 26 : Middle East at prayer
 - Chapter 27 : At the United Nations
 - Chapter 28 : The anti-Zionist resolution
 - Chapter 29 : Right and left in Lebanon
 - Chapter 30 : The Shi'a
 - Chapter 31 : Islamic revolution
 - Chapter 32 : The enemies of God
 - Chapter 33 : The roots of Muslim rage
 - Chapter 34 : The other Middle East problems
 - Chapter 35 : Did you say "American imperialism"? : power, weakness, and choices in the Middle East
 - Chapter 36 : The law of Islam
 - Chapter 37 : Not everybody hates Saddam
 - Chapter 38 : Mideast states : pawns no longer in imperial games
 - Chapter 39 : What Saddam wrought
 - Chapter 40 : The "sick man" of today coughs closer to home
 - Chapter 41 : Revisiting the paradox of modern Turkey
 - Chapter 42 : We must be clear
 - Chapter 43 : Deconstructing Osama and his evil appeal
 - Chapter 44 : Targeted by a history of hatred
 - Chapter 45 : A time for toppling
 - Chapter 46 : In defense of history
 - Chapter 47 : First-person narrative in the Middle East
 - Chapter 48 : Reflections on Islamic historiography
 - Chapter 49 : The Ottoman archives : a source for European history
 - Chapter 50 : History writing and national revival in Turkey
 - Chapter 51 : On occidentalism and orientalism
 
References
- ↑ Pryce-Jones, David (16 May 2004). "Review: Politics: From Babel to Dragomans by Bernard Lewis". The Times. Retrieved 31 July 2020.
 - ↑ Miles, Oliver (17 July 2004). "Lewis gun". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 July 2020.
 - ↑ Irwin, Robert (2 July 2004). "From Babel to Dragomans by Bernard Lewis — Lost in Arabic translation". The Independent. Retrieved 31 July 2020.
 - ↑ L. Carl, Brown (November 2004). "Capsule Review: From Babel to Dragomans: Interpreting the Middle East". Foreign Affairs. Retrieved 31 July 2020.
 
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