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Book: Levantine Entanglements

Chapter: 18. Honor, Shame and Hospitality: The Distribution of Power in the Premodern Levant

DOI: 10.1558/equinox.38458

Blurb:

The chapter makes a claim for a particular resilience in Levantine cultural production associated to local tradition and kinship structures. In particular, in her treatment of hospitality, honor and shame in the Levant, the author argues that sources from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries reflect how traditional values associated to local discourse (cf. Stordalen in the introduction) exerted considerable cultural and political influence long after tribal social discourse in the Levant had entered a modern pace. The author then argues for utilizing nineteenth century honor and shame practices as a heuristic prism for reading Levantine sources from the Iron Age.

Chapter Contributors

  • Eveline van der Steen (ejvdsteen@yahoo.co.uk - Evdsteen) 'Independent Scholar'