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The Camel's Neighbour - Travel and Travellers in Yemen (Paperback)
Loot Price: R460
Discovery Miles 4 600
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The Camel's Neighbour - Travel and Travellers in Yemen (Paperback)
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Loot Price R460
Discovery Miles 4 600
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In 2014, a coup d'etat in Sanaa paved the way for a devastating
conflict in Yemen. Doctor Andrew Moscrop cancelled plans to return
to the country that he had once called home. Instead, he returned
to his diaries and delved into memories of a time when he lived in
a rambling old tower house in Sanaa. As the war unfolded, he
re-read the accounts of past travellers to the country. And while
working in Greece, treating refugees from other Middle Eastern war
zones, he began writing a book set in Yemen. Both a personal
travelogue and a thought-provoking study of past travellers in
Yemen, The Camel's Neighbour offers a unique window into the
country. Importantly, it delivers a context and a valuable
corrective to the dehumanising stories of conflict and crisis that
have characterised this corner of Arabia in recent years. Evocative
descriptions of Sanaa and its unique cityscape, as well as
empathetic portrayals of people encountered and events experienced,
all create a narrative by turns contemplative and unexpected. The
author finds himself caught up in the fallout of the Danish Cartoon
Crisis, is involved in an outbreak of polio, and witnesses close-up
the distinctly undemocratic re-election of Yemen's President.
Meanwhile, his sense of humour is tested when he gatecrashes the
Queen's birthday party at the British Embassy and is urinated upon
by a goat during a hair-raising car journey. Examining the
impressions of earlier visitors, Moscrop explores how Yemen has
been seen and understood by foreigners from Europe and America.
These past visitors include blundering missionaries, avaricious
merchants, aristocratic Englishmen, and unlikely spies such as
Norman Lewis and Freya Stark. Moscrop delivers an intriguing and
original perspective on Western encounters with the Islamic world,
examining the imagery and cliches by which Yemen has been
represented from the sixteenth century to the present. Ultimately,
he unravels a story of how Yemen became an 'unknown country' with a
'forgotten war'.
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