A History of Modern Yemen
To the outside world, Yemen is famous for its beautiful landscapes and architecture. However, as Paul Dresch demonstrates, Yemen's modern history is unique and deserves to be better understood. While the borders of most Middle East states were defined by colonial powers after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, a single Yemeni state was not formed until 1990. In fact, much of Yemen's twentieth-century history was taken up constructing such a state, forged after years of civil war between the North and the South. The story is a complex one, but the author handles it masterfully, employing his skills as an anthropologist to re-enact the experiences of those involved through personal encounters and a first-hand knowledge of the region. The narrative is fast-moving and interactive, introducing the non-expert painlessly and pleasurably to a little-known slice of Arab history. Conversely, the expert will find much that is new on every page.
- A unique and innovative account of the history and anthropology of modern Yemen
- Accessible to students and general readers with illustrations, maps, and chronology providing further elucidation
- An interdiscplinary approach, given the author's coverage of history, politics and anthropology
Reviews & endorsements
'If you have time to read a single book on Yemen's recent past, Paul Dresch's A History of Modern Yemen is the one for you.' American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences
Product details
December 2000Paperback
9780521794824
304 pages
233 × 156 × 16 mm
0.5kg
23 b/w illus. 12 maps
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Turkey, Britain, and Imam Yahya: the years around 1900
- 2. Yahya and the British:
- 1918–1948
- 3. A new form of politics: the 1950s
- 4. Revolutions and civil wars: the 1960s
- 5. Two Yemeni states in the 1970s
- 6. Yemen in a wider world: politics and economics through the 1980s
- 7. United Yemen.