Link:/s/1ar2aosnmbt1mbiuowoe5g
Extract code: gg7j Title: Arabs in conquest and revolution
Author: [English] Eugene Logan
Translator: Lian Chaoqun
Douban score: 9.3
Publishing House: Zhejiang People's Publishing House
Publication year: 20 19-7- 1
Page count: 743
Content introduction:
The history of the Arab world is a bloody story about colonization, war and resistance, and it is also a diverse and moving story full of creativity. In this groundbreaking book, the award-winning Oxford University historian Eugene? Rogan has widely used Arab materials for five centuries, putting the Arab experience in its key historical background and presenting it objectively from the perspective of Arabs themselves. This landmark book covers the entire Arab world from North Africa to the Arabian Peninsula, and explores all aspects of modern Arab history. From the conquest of the Ottoman Empire in16th century, to the competition between European imperialism and superpowers in the Cold War era, and now to the era of American hegemony, Rogan vividly described the evolution of Arab identity in the past 500 years and the tortuous course of striving for national sovereignty and realizing national rejuvenation, and explored the historical causes of many difficulties in the Arab world today, which was full of authoritative and wise academic opinions.
In many parts of the world, the history, culture and character of the Arab nation are often seriously misunderstood. This book is the best choice for anyone who wants to know the modern Arab world clearly, efficiently and reliably.
About the author:
Eugene Logan
British historian, academician of St. Anthony's College of Oxford University, former director of Middle East Studies Center of St. Anthony's College, teaching modern Middle East history. His work "The State Border in the Late Ottoman Empire" was published by Albert? Haurani Prize. The Decline of the Ottoman Empire: The Middle East during World War I, 19 14- 1920, published by Guangxi Normal University Press on 20 17. Currently living in Oxford.