Al-Andalus Rediscovered
Autor Marvine Hoween Limba Engleză Hardback – 31 oct 2012
Al-Andalus Rediscovered focuses on Iberia's new Muslims, and their lives in a largely Roman Catholic region. Also featured are the Spanish and Portuguese officials, academics, NGOs and ordinary citizens who are trying to find better ways to integrate Muslims and other immigrants, despite domestic and European pressures for tougher counter-measures.
This book seeks to answer the basic questions: whether an Iberian model of a humane immigration policy is possible in 'fortress' Europe and whether the partisans of the Andalusian spirit of tolerance and diversity can prevail at this time of economic hardship and heightened radicalism in both the Islamic World and the West.
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Oxford University Press – 31 oct 2012 | 205.58 lei 3-5 săpt. |
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780199327577
ISBN-10: 0199327572
Pagini: 289
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
ISBN-10: 0199327572
Pagini: 289
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Recenzii
'A superb and remarkably comprehensive account of the recent transformation of Spain and Portugal into immigrant-receivingA" countries - with a particular emphasis on Muslim immigrants. There is really nothing like it. - this is the first book-length analysis of the contemporary resonance of Moorish Iberia in Spanish and Portuguese society, and the different responses of both countries to that historical legacy in the context of a new era of Muslim immigration. Howe is a skilled and remorseless reporter, who has clearly brought all her years of experience to bear in her research. The result is an authoritative, illuminating and indispensable guide to anyone concerned with Iberia, immigration in Europe and contemporary European-Muslim relations.' -- Matthew Carr, author of Blood and Faith: The Purging of Muslim Spain 'An important addition to contemporary studies of Portugal and Spain. The noted New York Times correspondent writes evocatively on an oddly neglected but increasingly vital, topic: roles of Muslims in Iberia in history and today, following recent migrations. The range of her sources is impressive: personal interviews with leaders, the media, diverse publications and the author's travels and observations of fifty years. This is the new 'culture history' at its best.' - Douglas L. Wheeler, Professor of History Emeritus, University of New Hampshire, and author of Republican Portugal and Historical Dictionary of Portugal 'Marvine Howe, within the context of her deep love for the land where Christians, Muslims and Jews once lived together in harmony, gives us a surprising look at today's Spain and Portugal, and their struggles to rebuild on historical foundations a multicultural society that fits the modern world. Her work is not nostalgia but "rediscovery," combining her own experiences with sound scholarship to address economic and social problems that are central to our age.' - Milton Viorst, author of Storm from the East: the Struggle Between the Arab World and the Christian West 'Unlike most European countries, Spain and Portugal are enriched by architectural wonders built many centuries ago by an advanced Islamic civilisation, and an influx of Muslim immigrants has prompted a revival of interest, sometimes conflicted, in that distant past. Marvine Howe, a writer rooted in both Iberian and North African cultures, explores the connections, looking at Muslim integration and Islam's place in Europe from an entirely new perspective in this very timely book.' - Barbara Crossette, former New York Times foreign correspondent and author of So Close to Heaven: The Vanishing Buddhist Kingdoms of the Himalayas