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A Poetic for Sociology - Richard Harvey Brown - Bog - The University of Chicago Press - Booktok.dk

Islamic Spain, 1250 to 1500 - L. P. Harvey - Bog - The University of Chicago Press - Plusbog.dk

Jewish Life in Muslim Libya - Harvey E. Goldberg - Bog - The University of Chicago Press - Booktok.dk

Jewish Life in Muslim Libya - Harvey E. Goldberg - Bog - The University of Chicago Press - Booktok.dk

In 1949 more than 35,000 Jews lived in Libya, but close to ninety percent had left before Libya attained its independence in 1952. Jewish Life in Muslim Libya combines historical and anthropological perspectives in depicting the changing relations between Muslims and Jews in Libya from the early nineteenth century up to the middle of the twentieth century. Harvey E. Goldberg shows that the cultural and religious worlds of the Jewish and Muslim communities in Libya were deeply intertwined in daily life and largely remained so despite political and social changes under successive Ottoman and Italian rule. He documents the intricate symbolic linkages of Jews and Muslims in different periods and in a variety of settings. His accounts of traditional Jewish weddings, of mock fights between Jewish teams that took place in early nineteenth-century Tripoli, and of the profession of street peddling demonstrate that, despite age-old images of Jews as outsiders or infidels, Jews were also an essential and familiar part of the local Islamic society. Goldberg's narrative continues through the British Military Administration in Libya, a period which saw growing Libyan nationalism and, in 1945, three days of riots in which more than 130 Jews were killed. Goldberg reflects on how these events both expressed and exacerbated a rupture in the social fabric linking Muslims and Jews, setting the scene for the mass emigration of Libyan Jews from their homeland.

DKK 357.00
4

The Gold Coast and the Slum - Harvey Warren Zorbaugh - Bog - The University of Chicago Press - Plusbog.dk

John Donne's Physics - Professor Timothy M. Harrison - Bog - The University of Chicago Press - Booktok.dk

John Donne's Physics - Professor Timothy M. Harrison - Bog - The University of Chicago Press - Plusbog.dk

Maps in Tudor England - Harvey - Bog - The University of Chicago Press - Plusbog.dk

Christianity and Race in the American South - Paul Harvey - Bog - The University of Chicago Press - Booktok.dk

Christianity and Race in the American South - Paul Harvey - Bog - The University of Chicago Press - Booktok.dk

Muslims in Spain, 1500 to 1614 - L. P. Harvey

Muslims in Spain, 1500 to 1614 - L. P. Harvey - Bog - The University of Chicago Press - Booktok.dk

Muslims in Spain, 1500 to 1614 - L. P. Harvey - Bog - The University of Chicago Press - Booktok.dk

On December 18, 1499, the Muslims in Granada revolted against the Christian city government's attempts to suppress their rights to live and worship as followers of Islam. Although the Granada riot was a local phenomenon that was soon contained, subsequent widespread rebellion provided the Christian government with an excuse—or justification, as its leaders saw things—to embark on the systematic elimination of the Islamic presence from Spain, as well as from the Iberian Peninsula as a whole, over the next hundred years. Picking up at the end of his earlier classic study, Islamic Spain, 1250 to 1500— which described the courageous efforts of the followers of Islam to preserve their secular, as well as sacred, culture in late medieval Spain—L. P. Harvey chronicles here the struggles of the Moriscos. These forced converts to Christianity lived clandestinely in the sixteenth century as Muslims, communicating in aljamiado— Spanish written in Arabic characters. More broadly, Muslims in Spain, 1500 to 1614, tells the story of an early modern nation struggling to deal with diversity and multiculturalism while torn by the fanaticism of the Counter-Reformation on one side and the threat of Ottoman expansion on the other. Harvey recounts how a century of tolerance degenerated into a vicious cycle of repression and rebellion until the final expulsion in 1614 of all Muslims from the Iberian Peninsula. Retold in all its complexity and poignancy, this tale of religious intolerance, political maneuvering, and ethnic cleansing resonates with many modern concerns. Eagerly awaited by Islamist and Hispanist scholars since Harvey's first volume appeared in 1990, Muslims in Spain, 1500 to 1614, will be compulsory reading for student and specialist alike. “The year’s most rewarding historical work is L. P. Harvey’s Muslims in Spain 1500 to 1614, a sobering account of the various ways in which a venerable Islamic culture fell victim to Christian bigotry. Harvey never urges the topicality of his subject on us, but this aspect inevitably sharpens an already compelling book.”—Jonathan Keats, Times Literary Supplement

DKK 965.00
2