The contemporary world is increasingly defined by dizzying flows
of people and ideas. But while Western travel is associated with a
pioneering spirit of discovery, the dominant image of Muslim
mobility is the jihadi who travels not to learn but to destroy.
"Journeys to the Other Shore" challenges these stereotypes by
charting the common ways in which Muslim and Western travelers
negotiate the dislocation of travel to unfamiliar and strange
worlds. In Roxanne Euben's groundbreaking excursion across
cultures, geography, history, genre, and genders, travel signifies
not only a physical movement across lands and cultures, but also an
imaginative journey in which wonder about those who live
differently makes it possible to see the world differently.
In the book we meet not only Herodotus but also Ibn Battuta, the
fourteenth-century Moroccan traveler. Tocqueville's journeys are
set against a five-year sojourn in nineteenth-century Paris by the
Egyptian writer and translator Rifa'a Rafi' al-Tahtawi, and
Montesquieu's novel "Persian Letters" meets with the memoir of an
East African princess, Sayyida Salme.
This extraordinary book shows that curiosity about the unknown,
the quest to understand foreign cultures, critical distance from
one's own world, and the desire to remake the foreign into the
familiar are not the monopoly of any single civilization or epoch.
Euben demonstrates that the fluidity of identities, cultures, and
borders associated with our postcolonial, globalized world has a
long history--one shaped not only by Western power but also by an
Islamic ethos of travel in search of knowledge.
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