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Them in the Matter
A Nineteenth-Century Islamic Argument for Constitutional
Government
Ahmad
ibn Abi Diyaf
Translated from the Arabic with Introduction and Notes by
L. Carl Brown
A
modern Muslim wrestles with notions of democracy
The
2005 winner of the The Arkansas Arabic Traslation Award, sponsored
by the King Fahd Center for Middle East and Islamic Studies
at the University of Arkansas and the University of Arkansas
Press, though written in the nineteenth century, is a richly
contextualized precursor of modern Muslim wrestlings with
notions of democracy and constitutionalism. Translated by
the distinguished Middle East historian L. Carl Brown, this
important historical work is now available to English language
readers for the first time.
Toward the end of his long career as an official in the Tunisian
government, Ahmad ibn Abi Diyaf (Bin Diyaf) took on the task
of writing a history of his country. The result was a multivolume
history, concentrating on the period that Bin Diyaf experienced
first-hand from within the small circle of Tunisia’s
government, where he had served from the 1820s to the
1860s.
It was as if a Harry Hopkins, Arthur Schlesinger Jr., or Henry
Kissinger had served not just a Roosevelt, Kennedy, or Nixon,
but all three presidents for an unbroken forty-year period.
Not only the most penetrating and most perceptive study of
nineteenth-century Tunisian political life, Bin Diyaf’s
history was illustrative of the activities and ideas in play
throughout the larger Ottoman world.
His work was a history with a thesis. Bin Diyaf sought to
show the need for his country, and for that matter the larger
Ottoman world, to adopt representative and responsive forms
of government as existed in Europe.
His purpose was most clearly set out in the Muqaddima or Introduction
to his monumental work, which Brown has translated. The ideas
produced in this text roughly a century and a half ago were
not institutionalized, but they did catch hold as ideas and
goals influencing later developments.
“L.
Carl Brown’s skillfully crafted translation of the Muquaddima
nicely conveys both the substance and flavor of this political
treatise. . . . His ideas have remarkable resonance today,
as Muslims and non-Muslims again struggle to comprehend each
other’s political ideals and systems.”
—Kenneth
J. Perkins, author of Port Sudan and Historical Dictionary
of Tunisia
“This
translation of the Muqaddima permits readers to encounter
an individual operating within mainstream Sunni political
tradition while justifying a reorientation of that very tradition.
. . . Readers will be grateful to Brown for making Bin Diyaf’s
version available in English.”
—William
L. Cleveland, author of A History of the Modern Middle East
L.
Carl Brown is Garrett Professor in Foreign Affairs Emeritus
at Princeton University, and long-time chairperson of the
Department of Near Eastern Studies. Over his distinguished
career he has published numerous books, articles, and translations,
including The Tunisia of Ahmad Bey, International Politics
and the Middle East, Religion and State, and Diplomacy in
the Middle East.
October
150 pages, 6" x 9"
$34.95 (s) Cloth
ISBN 978-1-55728-803-5 | 1-55728-803-8
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