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1. JEWISH DISCOVERY OF ISLAM Studies in Honor of Bernard Lewis
by Kramer Martin S. and Bernard Lewis 
Price: USD 59.95
Dealer: Biblio, Easton's Books, Inc.
Description: The Moshe Dayan Center. F. Date: 2001. Hardcover. Hardback in Fine condition without dust jacket. 8.3 X 5.6 X 1.0 inches. 311 pages. * Quick Shipping * All Books Mailed in Boxes * Free Tracking Provided * . 2001. The Moshe Dayan Center ISBN 9652240400 9789652240408 [US] 

2. JEWISH DISCOVERY OF ISLAM Studies in Honor of Bernard Lewis
by Kramer, Martin S. and Bernard Lewis 
Price: USD 59.95
Dealer: Abebooks, Easton's Books, Inc.
Description: ISBN10: 9652240400, ISBN13: 9789652240408, [publisher: The Moshe Dayan Center] Hardcover Hardback in Fine condition without dust jacket. 8.3 X 5.6 X 1.0 inches. 311 pages. * Quick Shipping * All Books Mailed in Boxes * Free Tracking Provided * [Mount Vernon, WA, U.S.A.] [Publication Year: 2001]  

3. Jewish Discovery of Islam: Studies in Honor of Bernard Lewis
by Martin S. Kramer; Martin S. Kramer Editor; Bernard Lewis Editor; 
Price: USD 350.00
Dealer: Biblio, Griffin Books
Description: The Moshe Dayan Center, Date: 2001-01-01. Hardcover. Like New. As new clean tight and bright Please email for photos. 2001. The Moshe Dayan Center ISBN 9652240400 9789652240408 [US] 

4. Jewish Discovery of Islam: Studies in Honor of Bernard Lewis
by Martin S. Kramer; Martin S. Kramer [Editor]; Bernard Lewis [Editor]; 
Price: USD 350.00
Dealer: Abebooks, Griffin Books
Description: ISBN10: 9652240400, ISBN13: 9789652240408, [publisher: The Moshe Dayan Center] Hardcover As new clean tight and bright Please email for photos. Larger books or sets may require additional shipping charges. Books sent via US Postal [Stamford, CT, U.S.A.] [Publication Year: 2001]  

5. Jewish Discovery of Islam: Studies in Honor of Bernard Lewis
by Martin S. Kramer; Martin S. Kramer [Editor]; Bernard Lewis [Editor]; 
Price: USD 352.50
Dealer: Alibris, Griffin Books via Alibris
Description: The Moshe Dayan Center 2001-01-01 Hardcover Like New As new clean tight and bright Please email for photos. 

6. Jewish Discovery of Islam: Studies in Honor of Bernard Lewis
by Kramer, Martin 
Price: USD 2470.00
Dealer: Alibris, BWS Bks via Alibris
Description: Syracuse, New York, U.S.A. Syracuse Univ Pr 1999 Hardcover New 9652240400. *** FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request ***-*** IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT-FLAWLESS COPY, PRISTINE, NEVER OPENED--311 pages; clean and crisp, tight and bright pages, with no writing or markings to the text. --TABLE OF CONTENTS: 1 Pedigree Remembered, Reconstructed, Invented: Benjamin Israel between East and West * 2 'Jew' and Jesuit at the Origins of Arabism: William Gifford Palgrave * 3 Arminius Vambery: Identities in Conflict * 4 Abraham Geiger: A Nineteenth-Century Jewish Reformer on the Origins of Islam * 5 Ignza Goldziher on Ernest Renan: From Orientalist Philology to the Study of Islam * 6 The Death of an Orientalist: Paul Kraus from Prague to Cairo * 7 The Road to Mecca: Muhammad Asad (born Leopold Weiss) * 8 The Transplantation of Islamic Studies from Europe to the Yishuv and Israel * 9 The Interaction of Judaic and Islamic Studies in the Scholarship of S. M. Stern * 10 Evariste Levi-Provencal and the Historiography of Iberian Islam. Contributors * Index. --REVIEW: Starting in 1976, Edward Said has argued that Western scholars of the Middle East are continuing "an unbroken tradition in European thought of profound hostility, even hatred, toward Islam, " and he singles out Bernard Lewis as their de facto leader. Strangely, when Lewis in turn argued in favor of the Orientalist tradition-that unique effort by members of one civilization to understand the outside world in depth-his colleagues with near-unanimity abandoned him. Still, the battle is not entirely over. While Lewis himself retired from the fray, his highly talented ex-student, Martin Kramer continues the not-entirely-lonely effort to defend several centuries of Western scholarship on the Middle East. In The Jewish Discovery of Islam, Kramer takes as his starting point several comments by Lewis about the important role of Jews in developing nineteenth-century European attitudes toward the Middle East and Islam, then asks: Did Jews actually made a distinct contribution to the Western discovery of Islam? His reply-and that of his nine contributing authors-is a resounding yes. He and they argue that nineteenth-century Jews found in the Muslim world a model directly relevant to their current situation. Looking about for arguments to bolster their case to join the mainstream of European life, they pointed to Islamic civilization at its height as to show the benefits of integrating Jewry. This in turn meant they had to prove that Baghdad and Cordoba represented peaks of human achievement. These "pro-Islamic Jews" routed the opposition and their empathetic, sympathetic approach rules the roost today. Kramer's book has many implications: By showing that the main Orientalist tradition derived far more from sympathetic Jewish approach than from the hostile Christian one, it devastates Said's grand theory of Orientalism. It establishes that recent Western attitudes to the outside world-such as the Third-Worldism of the 1960s and the multiculturalism of today-owe their existence in good part to the success of the pro-Islamic Jews' long-ago efforts of humanize Islam. Muslims eventually also picked up on the romantic Jewish myths about Islam and made these a standard part of their own self-image. Finally, Muslims now living in the West owe much to the Jewish scholars who laid the groundwork for their finding an at least partially hospitable reception." Middle East Quarterly, December 1999-Daniel Pipes--with a bonus offer-- 

7. Jewish Discovery of Islam: Studies in Honor of Bernard Lewis
by Kramer Martin 
Price: USD 2470.00
Dealer: Biblio, AB Books
Description: Syracuse, New York, U.S.A.: Syracuse Univ Pr. New. Date: 1999. Hardcover. 9652240400 .*** FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request *** - *** IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - FLAWLESS COPY, PRISTINE, NEVER OPENED -- 311 pages; clean and crisp, tight and bright pages, with no writing or markings to the text. -- TABLE OF CONTENTS: 1 Pedigree Remembered, Reconstructed, Invented: Benjamin Israel between East and West * 2 'Jew' and Jesuit at the Origins of Arabism: William Gifford Palgrave * 3 Arminius Vambery: Identities in Conflict * 4 Abraham Geiger: A Nineteenth-Century Jewish Reformer on the Origins of Islam * 5 Ignza Goldziher on Ernest Renan: From Orientalist Philology to the Study of Islam * 6 The Death of an Orientalist: Paul Kraus from Prague to Cairo * 7 The Road to Mecca: Muhammad Asad (born Leopold Weiss) * 8 The Transplantation of Islamic Studies from Europe to the Yishuv and Israel * 9 The Interaction of Judaic and Islamic Studies in the Scholarship of S. M. Stern * 10 Evariste Levi-Provencal and the Historiography of Iberian Islam. Contributors * Index. -- REVIEW: Starting in 1976, Edward Said has argued that Western scholars of the Middle East are continuing "an unbroken tradition in European thought of profound hostility, even hatred, toward Islam," and he singles out Bernard Lewis as their de facto leader. Strangely, when Lewis in turn argued in favor of the Orientalist tradition - that unique effort by members of one civilization to understand the outside world in depth - his colleagues with near-unanimity abandoned him. Still, the battle is not entirely over. While Lewis himself retired from the fray, his highly talented ex-student, Martin Kramer continues the not-entirely-lonely effort to defend several centuries of Western scholarship on the Middle East. In The Jewish Discovery of Islam, Kramer takes as his starting point several comments by Lewis about the important role of Jews in developing nineteenth-century European attitudes toward the Middle East and Islam, then asks: Did Jews actually made a distinct contribution to the Western discovery of Islam? His reply - and that of his nine contributing authors - is a resounding yes. He and they argue that nineteenth-century Jews found in the Muslim world a model directly relevant to their current situation. Looking about for arguments to bolster their case to join the mainstream of European life, they pointed to Islamic civilization at its height as to show the benefits of integrating Jewry. This in turn meant they had to prove that Baghdad and Cordoba represented peaks of human achievement. These "pro-Islamic Jews" routed the opposition and their empathetic, sympathetic approach rules the roost today. Kramer's book has many implications: By showing that the main Orientalist tradition derived far more from sympathetic Jewish approach than from the hostile Christian one, it devastates Said's grand theory of Orientalism. It establishes that recent Western attitudes to the outside world - such as the Third-Worldism of the 1960s and the multiculturalism of today - owe their existence in good part to the success of the pro-Islamic Jews' long-ago efforts of humanize Islam. Muslims eventually also picked up on the romantic Jewish myths about Islam and made these a standard part of their own self-image. Finally, Muslims now living in the West owe much to the Jewish scholars who laid the groundwork for their finding an at least partially hospitable reception." Middle East Quarterly, December 1999 -Daniel Pipes -- with a bonus offer-- . 1999. Syracuse Univ Pr ISBN 9652240400 9789652240408 [US] 

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