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528 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1976
Any writer who embarks on an attempt to describe and interpret the contemporary Arab world to Western readers is confronted by a set of formidable difficulties. At the superficial level he encounters stereotyped vision of hte Arabs, and of the Islamic religion which is closely associated with them in the Western mind. A more complex problem is that the average educated Westerner is unaware that he suffers from prejudice towards the Arabs. The New England or Hamsptead liberal would be alarmed to find himself making a derogatory generalization about "the blacks" "the chinese" or still more "the Jews." He feels no such compunction in his thoughts about "The Arabs." [The] word "Arab still seemed to conjure up a picture of a shaikh in flowing robes, brandishing an outdated rifle as he urged his camel across the sand dunes to attack a neighbouring encampment. [pg491]