The New Arabs: How the Millennial Generation Is Changing the Middle East
Juan Cole
(Author)
21,000+ Reviews
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Description
Renowned blogger and Middle East expert Juan Cole takes us "inside the youth movements in Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya, showing us how activists used technology and social media to amplify their message and connect with like-minded citizens" (The New York Times) in this "rousing study of the Arab Spring" (Publishers Weekly, starred review).For three decades, Cole has sought to put the relationship of the West and the Muslim world in historical context. In The New Arabs he has written "an elegant, carefully delineated synthesis of the complicated, intertwined facets of the Arab uprisings," (Kirkus Reviews), illuminating the role of today's Arab youth--who they are, what they want, and how they will affect world politics. Not all big groups of teenagers and twenty-somethings necessarily produce historical movements centered on their identity as youth, with a generational set of organizations, symbols, and demands rooted at least partially in the distinctive problems of people their age. The Arab Millennials did. And, in a provocative, big-picture argument about the future of the Arab world, The New Arabs shows just how they did it. "Engaging, powerful, and comprehensive...The book feels as indispensable to scholars as it is insightful for a more casual reader" (Los Angeles Times).
Product Details
Price
$17.00
$15.81
Publisher
Simon & Schuster
Publish Date
October 20, 2015
Pages
368
Dimensions
5.9 X 9.1 X 0.9 inches | 0.9 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781451690408
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Become an affiliateAbout the Author
Juan Cole received his doctorate in Islamic Studies from the University of California, Los Angeles, in 1984. Since then, he has taught history at the University of Michigan. His monographs have treated the Shiite clergy in South Asia, anti-colonial revolution in Egypt, millenarianism in modern Iran, transnational Shiite thought and movements, Napoleon Bonaparte's invasion of Egypt, and the US engagement with the Muslim world. After September 11, he emerged as a public intellectual, with frequent appearances on television and radio and popular columns at Salon and Truthdig. His weblog, Informed Comment, receives a wide readership from those interested in the Western relationship to the Muslim world.
Reviews
"Engaging, powerful and comprehensive. ... [Cole] structures chapters with a handsome amount of narrative, peppering them with stories from his own travels and conversations undertaken in fluent Arabic. ...The book feels as indispensable to scholars as it is insightful for a more casual reader."--Nathan Deuel "The Los Angeles Times "
"Paints a nuanced picture of a fascinating generation. . . . The value of the book becomes apparent in the depth it provides to the simplistic, sound bite-ready explanations for the Arab Spring."--William O'Connor "The Daily Beast "
"[Cole's] comprehensive narrative of political events will long serve as a vital resource for those wanting to understand this era."--Lawrence Rosen "The Guardian (UK) "
"Ambitious and largely successful... Cole's account is rich and textured, and unexpectedly optimistic. Western readers may be surprised by the idealistic liberality and secularism of the young people he profiles. At the same time, Cole doesn't shy away from the ugliness of his story. ... The New Arabs distinguishes itself by presenting a full, rich spectrum of ideas and observations [and] is an indispensable work for the contemporary reader of Middle East history and politics. It grants backstage access to one of the 21st century's most important social movements and illuminates the motives and methods of the young people who are remaking the region. Our first reaction to dramatic change is usually to oversimplify in order to 'understand.' Cole has the courage to tell a more complicated story, and that makes The New Arabs a vital read."--James Norton "The Christian Science Monitor "
"[The New Arabs] is at its most illuminating when it takes the reader inside the youth movements in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya, showing us how activists used technology and social media to amplify their message and connect with like-minded citizens across the region. ... Mr. Cole chronicles it in fascinating detail here, recounting the stories of prominent dissidents and their often pioneering use of Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and cellphone technology to network and organize."--Michiko Kakutani "The New York Times "
"Paints a nuanced picture of a fascinating generation. . . . The value of the book becomes apparent in the depth it provides to the simplistic, sound bite-ready explanations for the Arab Spring."--William O'Connor "The Daily Beast "
"[Cole's] comprehensive narrative of political events will long serve as a vital resource for those wanting to understand this era."--Lawrence Rosen "The Guardian (UK) "
"Ambitious and largely successful... Cole's account is rich and textured, and unexpectedly optimistic. Western readers may be surprised by the idealistic liberality and secularism of the young people he profiles. At the same time, Cole doesn't shy away from the ugliness of his story. ... The New Arabs distinguishes itself by presenting a full, rich spectrum of ideas and observations [and] is an indispensable work for the contemporary reader of Middle East history and politics. It grants backstage access to one of the 21st century's most important social movements and illuminates the motives and methods of the young people who are remaking the region. Our first reaction to dramatic change is usually to oversimplify in order to 'understand.' Cole has the courage to tell a more complicated story, and that makes The New Arabs a vital read."--James Norton "The Christian Science Monitor "
"[The New Arabs] is at its most illuminating when it takes the reader inside the youth movements in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya, showing us how activists used technology and social media to amplify their message and connect with like-minded citizens across the region. ... Mr. Cole chronicles it in fascinating detail here, recounting the stories of prominent dissidents and their often pioneering use of Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and cellphone technology to network and organize."--Michiko Kakutani "The New York Times "