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Mirage of the Saracen

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Mirage of the Saracen analyzes the growth of monasticism and Christian settlements in the Sinai Peninsula through the early seventh century C.E. Walter D. Ward examines the ways in which Christian ...
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  • 17 December 2014
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Mirage of the Saracen analyzes the growth of monasticism and Christian settlements in the Sinai Peninsula through the early seventh century C.E. Walter D. Ward examines the ways in which Christian monks justified occupying the Sinai through creating associations between Biblical narratives and Sinai sites while assigning uncivilized, negative, and oppositional traits to the indigenous nomadic population, whom the Christians pejoratively called "Saracens." By writing edifying tales of hostile nomads and the ensuing martyrdom of the monks, Christians not only reinforced their claims to the spiritual benefits of asceticism but also provoked the Roman authorities to enhance defense of pilgrimage routes to the Sinai. When Muslim armies later began conquering the Middle East, Christians also labeled these new conquerors as Saracens, connecting Muslims to these pre-Islamic representations. This timely and relevant work builds a historical account of interreligious encounters in the ancient world, showing the Sinai as a crucible for forging long-lasting images of both Christians and Muslims, some of which endure today.
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Price: $65.00
Pages: 224
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Series: Transformation of the Classical Heritage
Publication Date: 17 December 2014
ISBN: 9780520959521
Format: eBook
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Preface and Acknowledgments
Note on Translation and Transliteration
Acronyms

One: The Beginnings of the Humanitarian Era the Eastern Mediterranean

Two:  The Humanitarian Imagination and the Year of the Locust:  International Relief in the Wartime Eastern Mediterranean, 1914-1918

Three: The Form and Content of Suffering: Humanitarian Knowledge, Mass Publics and the Report, 1885-1927

Four:  ‘America’s Wards:’ Near East Relief and American Humanitarian Exceptionalism, 1919-1923

Five: The League of Nations Rescue of Trafficked Women and Children and the Paradox of Modern Humanitarianism, 1920-1936

Six: Between Refugee and Citizen: The Practical Failures of Modern Humanitarianism in the Interwar Eastern Mediterranean, 1923-1939

Seven: Modern Humanitarianism’s Troubled Legacies, 1927-1948

Notes

Select Bibliography

Index