University of Chicago Press
An Invitation to Laughter
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Edited by:
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Preface by:
About this book
For the late Fuad I. Khuri, a distinguished career as an anthropologist began not because of typical concerns like accessibility, money, or status, but because the very idea of an occupation that baffled his countrymen made them—and him—laugh. “When I tell them that ‘anthropology’ is my profession . . . they think I am either speaking a strange language or referring to a new medicine.” This profound appreciation for humor, especially in the contradictions inherent in the study of cultures, is a distinctive theme of An Invitation to Laughter, Khuri’s astute memoir of life as an anthropologist in the Middle East.
A Christian Lebanese, Khuri offers up in this unusual autobiography both an insider’s and an outsider’s perspective on life in Lebanon, elsewhere in the Middle East, and in West Africa. Khuri entertains and informs with clever insights into such issues as the mentality of Arabs toward women, eating habits of the Arab world, the impact of Islam on West Africa, and the extravagant lifestyles of wealthy Arabs, and even offers a vision for a type of democracy that could succeed in the Middle East. In his life and work, as these astonishing essays make evident, Khuri demonstrated how the discipline of anthropology continues to make a difference in bridging dangerous divides.
Author / Editor information
Fuad I. Khuri (1935–2003) was professor of anthropology at the American University of Beirut from 1964 to 1987. Khuri held a series of visiting professorships at the London School of Economics, University of Manchester, University of Chicago, and University of Oregon. Among his many books are From Village to Suburb, Tribe and State in Bahrain,Imams and Emirs and, most recently, Being a Druze. Sonia Jalbout Khuri has taught mathematics education in Lebanon and the United Kingdom. She also worked as a research assistant and editor with her late husband, Fuad I. Khuri.
Reviews
“Fuad Khuri’s An Invitation to Laughter is a riveting account of life as a Christian Lebanese anthropologist in the Middle East. In consistently engaging and lively prose, Khuri depicts his experiences along the sectarian divide in Lebanon, elsewhere in the Middle East, and in West Africa with humor, compassion, and insight. This unique and timely book is destined to be a must-read for scholars of the Middle East, students of the social sciences, or anyone seeking an understanding of how anthropology continues to make a difference by bridging dangerous divides.”
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Foreword
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Prologue: The man himself
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Note on Arabic words
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Introduction. Why “laughter”?
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1. Exploring origins. The choice of anthropology
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2. Studying anthropology in Oregon. “How wonderful!”
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3. Being Lebanese. A nationality or a profession?
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4. Religious syncretism. “I offer sacrifices to my ancestors on Friday because I am a Muslim”
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5. Lebanese traders in West Africa. Always ending the day in losses
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6. Change as faith. The restless Americans
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7. Teaching in Beirut. “Sir, keep this information to yourself ”
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8. Establishing an Arab association for the social sciences. The tyranny of consensus
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9. The exotic in the suburbs of Beirut “It is written”
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10. Alumni and 'ulama in Bahrain. “We all seek knowledge”
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11. Open secrets Discussable but not publishable
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12. Table manners in Yemen. Eat! Do not talk!
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13. The official policy toward emigration in Lebanon. “We eat bread, not potatoes”
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14. The Arab rich. “An ugly horse that wins the race is praised for its good looks”
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15. Who wants to be a zaἵm? The agony of fame
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16. Living in Great Britain. “The best in the world”
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Appendix 1: List of Research Projects
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Appendix 2: List of Publications
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Index
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