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The Travels of Ibn Battuta: A Guided Reader is a unique Arabic
literature and history textbook for students at the High
Intermediate to Advanced level. Ibn Battuta was the greatest
traveler of the medieval period, and his narrative provides an
unmatched view of medieval civilization from Spain to China, and
from Russia to Mali. Students will read the authentic descriptions
of Ibn Battuta's encounters with cannibals, desert bandits, Mongol
chieftains, and his impressions of wonders from Timbuktu to
Constantinople to Quanzhou. This book provides a guided and
scaffolded survey of Ibn Battuta's greatest travels through twenty
lessons, each with extensive preparatory, explanatory, and
application exercises, enabling students to read the actual words
of the original text without undue difficulty.While telling a
fascinating narrative as a whole, each of the twenty lessons is
designed to stand alone for classroom or individual study.
Individual sections focus on classical grammar and stylistics,
historical and cultural background and critical evaluation of the
texts. The book also provides teachers with a wide range of
comprehension, composition, interpretation, and research
activities.
Can a writer help to bring about a more just society? This question
was at the heart of the movement of al-adab al-multazim, or
committed literature, which claimed to dominate Arab writing in the
mid-twentieth century. By the 1960s, however, leading Egyptian
writers had retreated into disillusionment, producing agonized
works that challenged the key assumptions of socially engaged
writing. Rather than a rejection of the idea, however, these works
offered reinterpretation of committed writing that helped set the
stage for activist writers of the present.David DiMeo focuses on
the work of three leading writers whose socially committed fiction
was adapted to the disenchantment and discontent of the late
twentieth century: Naguib Mahfouz, Yusuf Idris, and Sonallah
Ibrahim. Despite their disappointments with the direction of
Egyptian society in the decades following the 1952 revolution, they
kept the spirit of committed literature alive through a deeply
introspective examination of the relationship between the writer,
the public, and political power.Reaching back to the roots of this
literary movement, DiMeo examines the development of committed
literature from its European antecedents to its peak of influence
in the 1950s, and contrasts the committed works with those of
disillusionment that followed. Committed to Disillusion is vital
reading for scholars and students of Arabic literature and the
modern history and politics of the Middle East.
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