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New Titles August 2015–January 2016 Edinburgh University Press New Titles August 2015 – January 2016 New Titles August 2015–January 2016 Edinburgh University Press New Titles August 2015 – January 2016 Highlights of the New Titles Catalogue include: Contents Being Palestinian Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies 3 Personal Reflections on Palestinian Identity in the Diaspora Politics 6 Edited by Yasir Suleiman Language & Linguistics 9 What does it means to be Palestinian in the diaspora? Classics 11 page 3 Law 12 Scottish Studies 13 Philosophy 15 Financial Planning for Older People Film and Media Studies 18 A Comprehensive Guide to Decision Making Literary Studies 21 John Kerrigan Order Form 25 A guide to the legal issues surrounding money and finances for older Index 27 people or those planning for older age page 12 Recovering Scotland’s Slavery Past Join our mailing list The Caribbean Connection Visit our website at www.euppublishing.com Edited by Tom M. Devine and register to receive catalogues and emails in the following areas: The first ever book to strip away the myths and write the real history of Scotland’s slavery past American Studies page 14 Classics & Ancient History Film & Media Studies Islamic & Middle Eastern Studies Artmachines Journals Deleuze, Guattari, Simondon Language & Linguistics Anne Sauvagnargues Law Literary Studies 13 essays by Deleuze specialist Anne Sauvagnargues – 12 of which were Politics previously unavailable in English Philosophy page 16 Scottish Studies Alternatively, subject catalogues and leaflets are Worldly Shakespeare available on request: Write to: Catalogue Requests The Theatre of Our Good Will Edinburgh University Press, Richard Wilson The Tun – Holyrood Road, 12 (2f) Jackson’s Entry, The first study to consider Shakespeare’s plays through the lens of Edinburgh, EH8 8PJ, Scotland contemporary agonistic political philosophy Email: [email protected] page 21 Inspection Copies Useful Contacts Ebooks Books marked with an are available All paperback textbooks are available on Timothy Wright e as ebooks. Our ebooks are available to inspection. If you teach a relevant course and Chief Executive libraries from a number of aggregators are considering using these books as course Tel: +44 (0)131 650 4219 and platforms, and are available for texts, you can request a maximum of 3 books for [email protected] individuals to buy from the Kindle and assessment per academic year. Inspection copies Nook stores. See the full list at www. will be sent out at the discretion of the publisher. Anna Glazier euppublishing.com/page/infozone/ Head of Sales and Marketing librarians/e-books. Contact: Tel: +44 (0)131 650 4223 Inspection Copies [email protected] Edinburgh University Press, The Tun – Holyrood Please note: Road, 12 (2f) Jackson’s Entry, Avril Cuthbert All prices and publication dates are Edinburgh, EH8 8PJ, Scotland Digital Sales Manager provisional and subject to change. Tel: +44 (0)131 650 4334 Tel: +44 (0)131 650 4329 For the most up-to-date information, Email: [email protected] [email protected] please see our website: www.euppublishing.com Cover image © Rocco Gangle and Paul Smith 2 Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies Contemporary Issues in Islam Asma Afsaruddin Discusses key issues in Islam today including Shari’a, jihād, politics, gender and interfaith relations Most public – and occasionally academic – discourses in Key Features the West present the Islamic tradition as unchanging and • Historically contextualised discussion of seven key therefore unable to respond to the modern world. Such an “controversial” Islamic issues and concepts in the ahistorical approach can foster the belief that Muslim majority context of modernity and relations with the West and Western societies are destined to clash. However, by • Challenges the “clash of civilisations” thesis placing the discussion of topics such as the Shari‘ah, jihād, by identifying shared, universal values that the caliphate, women’s status and interfaith relations within are retrievable from a deeper, historicised a longer historical framework, Contemporary Issues in Islam investigation of the Islamic past and its Textbook reveals the evolutionary nature of Islamic thought and the connection with the present diversity within it. • Interrogates the premise that secularisation must precede a successful transition to modernity and that Western-style modernity is the only paradigm available Asma Afsaruddin is Professor of Islamic Studies at Indiana The New Edinburgh Islamic Surveys University. August 2015 232pp e Pb 978 0 7486 3277 0 £24.99 Hb 978 0 7486 3276 3 £75.00 Muslims in Western Europe Jonas Otterbeck Original author for previous editions, Jørgen S. Nielsen Introduces the social, political, cultural and religious position of Muslims living in contemporary Europe This introduction to the story of Muslims in Western Europe New to this edition describes their early history and outlines the causes and • All six country-related chapters (France , Germany, courses of modern Muslim immigration. Firstly explaining the UK, the Netherlands and Belgium, Scandinavia, how Muslim communities have developed in individual Southern Europe ) are substantially updated countries, the book goes on to explore present day ethnic • The chapter on family, law and culture is revised to composition and the political, legal and cultural contexts include the work from recent studies in which communities exist. There is also a comparative • The chapter on Muslim organisations now covers 4th Edition consideration of issues common to Muslims in all Western groups and movements that have developed in Textbook European countries including the role of the family, and the the last decade questions of worship, education and religious thought. • The chapter on European Muslims in a new Europe now covers the cartoon crisis, Eurabia- Islamophobia and new radical nationalism Jørgen S. Nielsen is Honorary Professor of Islamic Studies at The New Edinburgh Islamic Surveys the University of Copenhagen. Jonas Otterbeck is Professor of December 2015 208pp e Islamic Studies at Centre for Theology and Religious Studies, Pb 978 1 4744 0933 9 £24.99 Lund University. Being Palestinian Personal Reflections on Palestinian Identity in the Diaspora Edited by Yasir Suleiman What does it means to be Palestinian in the diaspora? In this ground-breaking volume, 102 contributors now living in the UK and North America reflect in their own words on what it means to be Palestinian in the diaspora – exploring how Palestine is both lost and found, bereaved and celebrated, and taking the reader on an intimate journey through the tangled ties between ‘home’ and ‘homeland’. Men and women, young and old, Christians and Muslims, Palestinians from different generations and a variety of professional backgrounds (business people, lawyers, judges, fiction writers, poets, journalists, film-makers, diplomats and academics) offer contributions. Touching, often troubling, but full of character and wit, the reflections in Being Palestinian offer a radically fresh look at the modern Palestinian experience in the West. Yasir Suleiman is His Majesty Sultan Qaboos Bin Sa’id Professor January 2016 320pp e of Modern Arabic Studies at the University of Cambridge. 120 B&W illustrations Pb 978 1 4744 0539 3 £19.99 Hb 978 0 7486 3402 6 £80.00 2 www.euppublishing.com 3 Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies Islam and Colonialism Becoming Modern in Indonesia and Malaya Muhamad Ali Explores the ways in which Islam and European colonialism shaped modernity in the Indo- Malay world Focusing on Indonesia and Malaysia, this book looks at how European colonial and Islamic modernising powers operated in the common and parallel domains of government and politics, law and education in the first half of the twentieth century. It shows that colonialisation was able to co-exist with Islamisation, arguing that Islamic movements were not necessarily antithetical to modernisation, nor that Western modernity was always anathema to Islamic and local custom. Muhamad Ali is Associate Professor at the University of December 2015 320pp e California, Riverside. 2 B&W maps Hb 978 1 4744 0920 9 £75.00 Arab Christians in British Mandate Palestine Communalism and Nationalism, 1917-1948 Noah Haiduc-Dale Examines the relationship between Palestinian Arab Christians and the budding Palestinian nationalist movement While accepting the difficulties of belonging to a minority religious community in a mandate ruled through religious divisions and in a region fraught with religious symbolism, Haiduc-Dale challenges the commonly held belief that Arab Christians in Palestine retreated from the nationalist movement as the British mandate wore on. Instead, by examining Israeli and British archival material, as well as local Arabic newspapers, he convincingly argues that Arab Christians sought to strengthen their religious identity while simultaneously bolstering their nationalist credentials. Noah Haiduc-Dale is Assistant Professor of History at Centenary September 2015 232pp e College, New Jersey. 10 B&W illustrations Pb 978 1 4744 0924 7 £19.99 Previous Hb 978 0 7486 7603 3 £65.00 The Egyptian Dream Egyptian National Identity and Uprisings Noha Mellor Explores the struggle to define Egyptian national identity post-independence The story of Egyptian identity from the beginning of the twentieth century is one constructed by statesmen, intellectuals and Islamic thinkers. This book argues that the current fragmentation of Egypt’s political scene reflects the increasing social division in a country where ‘the people’ are demanding
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