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Peter Mansfield (1) (1928–1996)

Author of A History of the Middle East

For other authors named Peter Mansfield, see the disambiguation page.

10 Works 1,095 Members 7 Reviews

Works by Peter Mansfield

A History of the Middle East (1991) 721 copies, 7 reviews
The Arabs (1976) 250 copies
Nasser's Egypt (1969) 36 copies
The British in Egypt (1971) 24 copies
The new Arabians (1981) 14 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1928-09-02
Date of death
1996-03-09
Gender
male
Short biography
British political journalist, specializing in the Middle East.
Nationality
England
UK
Birthplace
Ranchi, India
Place of death
Warwick, Warwickshire, England, UK

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Reviews

7 reviews
The author chronicles the last two centuries in the Middle East’s history, from the decline of the Ottoman Empire, through European colonialism, onto decolonization and the advent of nationalism and ending at the present with the rise of militant Islamic fundamentalism and efforts at reform. Although the subject matter is emotionally charged, I found the book to be fair and balanced, relying on meticulous historical research. Good if one wants a fairly impartial and well written overview show more of the deeply imbedded and complex reasons for the current upheaval in the region – including the seemingly intractable Arab-Israeli conflict. show less
OK. So now we're on the Fourth Edition. I find much truth and wisdom in previous reviews but in the Chapter "Pax Americana" I found numerous typos and hanging clauses. It's after this point that the book begins to lose coherence. The author jumps from country to country and from time to time so that -- unless one has an exceptionally good memory for the material that has preceded -- one may become a bit lost.
Although the last chapter is outdated since the book was published in 1991, this is a very readable and utilitarian history book.
http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/1352235.html#cutid1

This really covers only the last two centuries - the period to 1800 is covered in a breathless 35-page first chapter - but I learnt a lot from it. Although I knew the general outline of the fall of the Ottoman Empire (including the Arab revolt) and was also fairly familiar with the highlights of post-1948 history, there was a lot from the three decades between that was new to me, specifically the various imperialist engagements with Arab show more governments and governance. Really the notion that the US and/or the Europeans could be credible advocates of democracy in the Middle East was always nonsense. show less

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Statistics

Works
10
Members
1,095
Popularity
#23,468
Rating
3.8
Reviews
7
ISBNs
56
Languages
4

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