Mediterranean passages : readings from Dido to Derrida
 Format: Book
 Published: Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press, c2008.
 Language: English
 Summary:
The Mediterranean is the meeting point of three continents-Asia, Africa, and Europe-as well as three major monotheistic religions-Islam, Judaism, and Christianity. Focusing on global networks and cultural exchanges, Mediterranean Passages collects writings from across three centuries to provide a pan-Mediterranean perspective of the cultural, political, and economic rela... (see more)
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Item Description
  • xiv, 399 p. : ill., maps ; 25 cm.
  • ISBN: 9780807831830 (cloth : alk. paper)
  • ISBN: 0807831832 (cloth : alk. paper)
  • ISBN: 9780807858714 (pbk. : alk. paper)
  • ISBN: 0807858714 (pbk. : alk. paper)
  • OCLC Number: 192042283
Notes
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. [379]-380) and index.
DUKE003991619
Table of Contents
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. Ancient Diasporas
  • The Sea Peoples Letters from Ugarit and Inscriptions of Ramses III
  • Cedars for Egypt Wenamun
  • Phoenicians in the West Nora Stone and Marseilles Inscription
  • Odysseus's Wanderings Homer Travels of a Farmer Hesiod
  • Exile and Return Psalm 137 and Ezra
  • Lamentation over Tyre Ezekiel Delos at the Crossroads
  • Homeric Hymn to Apollo Study
  • Tours Diogenes Laertius and Herodotus Travels in a Fish Jonah
  • Beyond the Pillars of Hercules
  • Hanno the Carthaginian Persians versus Greeks Aeschylus King
  • Minos and Thalassocracy Thucydides
  • Grain Trade Dispute attributed to Demosthenes Foundation
  • Decree of Cyrene
  • Where to Found a Polis
  • Aristotle Escorting a Princess Artemidorus
  • Chapter 2. Mare Nostrum: Our Sea
  • A Roman Mediterranean Polybius Sale of Callirhoe Chariton
  • Cleopatra's Death
  • Horace Dido and Aeneas Virgil
  • Translating the Law Philo
  • Shipwreck at Malta
  • Acts of the Apostles
  • Alexander's Civilizing Mission
  • Plutarch Touring Egypt (Julia Balbilla)
  • Carthaginian Ascendancy Appian
  • Olympic Origins
  • Pausanias Women in the Holy Land
  • Eusebius of Caesarea and Egeria Painful De Partures
  • Augustine Law and Holy Wisdom
  • Justinian and Procopius T-O
  • Map Isidore of Seville
  • Chapter 3. Barzakh: The Waters Between
  • Ornament of the World
  • Ibn Abd al-Hakam Charlemagne and Harun Einhard and the Monk of St
  • Gall Arabic Medicine in Europe
  • Constantine the African Refugee
  • Dispatch Karaite Jews from Ascalon
  • Aristotle in Andalus
  • Maimonides and Averroes
  • Jewish and Muslim Networks
  • Benjamin of Tudela and Ibn Jubayr
  • Perplexed among Crusaders (Usamah ibn Munqidh Richard and Saladin Ambroise)
  • Purgatory Dante Alighieri
  • The Reunited Lovers Giovanni Boccaccio Between East and West (Ibn Battuta)
  • Two Romes Manuel Chrysoloras
  • A Muslim Caesar (Tursun Beg)
  • Chapter 4. Grand Tours
  • The Westerly Route to the East Christopher Columbus
  • An Ottoman Prince on Rhodes (William Caoursin and Hoja Effendi)
  • Papal Slave Leo Africanus New Argonauts (Ludovico Ariosto)
  • A Sultanate of Women Catherine (de Medici Marine)
  • Merchant Shakespeare
  • The Captive's Tale (Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra)
  • An Ottoman Tourist (Evliya Ûelebi Efendi)
  • The Conversion of Sabbatai Sevi (Samuel Brett and Sir Paul Rycaut and Richard Kidder)
  • A New World Lady Wortley Montagu
  • From Rome to Naples (William Beckford)
  • From Naples to Palermo (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
  • May the Mamluks be Cursed (Napoleon Bona)
  • Parte Base Ignorance and Disbelief (Abd al-Rahman al-Jabarti)
  • Chapter 5. Epic Encounters
  • Where Sappho Loved Lord Byron
  • The Bejeweled Fly
  • Whisk Pierre Deval From Palma to Malta
  • Alphonse Marie Louis de Prat de Lamartine
  • Voyage to Algeria
  • Alexis de Tocqueville Treasures of Troy (Heinrich Schliemann)
  • Exquisite Whores Guy de Maupassant
  • Pray for a Long Journey Constantine Cavafy
  • The Corrupting Sea (Thomas Mann)
  • Remapping the Mediterranean
  • The King-Crane Commission
  • Remember the Harbor
  • Ernest Hemingway
  • Women Unveil (Huda Shaarawi)
  • City and Psyche (Sigmund Freud)
  • Reconciling Tradition and Modernity (Yahya Haqqi)
  • Ship of Misery (I. F. Stone and Odysseus's Scar and Erich Auerbach)
  • Chapter 6. A Global Pond
  • Mediterraneanizing Identity Americo (Castro Oldnewland and David-Ben Gurion)
  • Daughters of Aphrodite (Lawrence Durrell)
  • The Sixth Continent (Halikarnas Balkis)
  • Mirror of the Self (Orhan Pamuk)
  • Thousands of Watchful Eyes (Assia Djebar)
  • Last Evening in this Land (Mahmud Darwish)
  • Guarding the Coasts Euro-Mediterranean Partnership Island (Melancholy Margarita)
  • Karapanou Blind Dreams (Fadila al Faruq)
  • The Language of the Other (Jacques Derrida)
  • Partners Adrift (Fawzi Mellah)
  • Mediterranean Thinking (Franco Cassano)
  • Further Readings
  • Index
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Title Summary
The Mediterranean is the meeting point of three continents-Asia, Africa, and Europe-as well as three major monotheistic religions-Islam, Judaism, and Christianity. Focusing on global networks and cultural exchanges, Mediterranean Passages collects writings from across three centuries to provide a pan-Mediterranean perspective of the cultural, political, and economic relations that crisscross the region, linking people and places from antiquity to the present. From Homer's hymn to Apollo to the writing of French-Algerian philosopher Jacques Derrida, from the contemporary accounts of North African Berber conqueror Tariq ibn al-Yazid to the journalism of American I. F. Stone, this chronologically organized anthology juxtaposes the voices and experiences of travelers, exiles, and colonizers who have lived in or visited the Mediterranean region since before 1200 B.C.E. Literary and historical texts and a gallery of maps, architecture, photographs, and paintings provide glimpses of travel and migration, trade routes, military conquest, and cultural exchange. Together, these selections highlight the networks of connections, intersections, and interruptions that animate a vital and contested geographical space.
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